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Abstract: SA-PO1053

Gender Distributions in NIH Grant Awards for Transplant Research, 2019-2023

Session Information

Category: Transplantation

  • 2102 Transplantation: Clinical

Author

  • Tripathi, Ohm S., University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut, United States
Background

Lower publication rates and higher attrition among female faculty are often linked to reduced institutional support and fewer start-up grants. This study investigates gender disparities in National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant awards, specifically in the Organ Transplantation and Transplantation funding categories. We assess differences in the number of awards, total funding, and average funding between male and female first-time NIH awardees from 2019 to 2023.

Methods

We analyzed NIH grant awards from fiscal years 2019 to 2023 in the Organ Transplantation and Transplantation funding categories. Data included the number of grants, total funding (direct and indirect costs), average funding per recipient, and distribution of top grant types (R01, U01, P01) by gender. Statistical significance was determined using t-tests.

Results

From 2019 to 2023, a total of 7,561 NIH grants were awarded in the selected categories, with a significant gender disparity in recipients: 5,218 (69%) male and 2,343 (31%) female, resulting in a 38% gender gap. The total funding distribution reflected this disparity, with males receiving 69.3% of the total cost ($2.53B) compared to females (30.7%, $1.12B) .When comparing average grant funding per recipient, there was no significant gender disparity:
Direct Costs: Female: $319,919.55; Male: $323,798.07 (gap: 0.6%),Indirect Costs: Female: $127,888.73; Male: $132,196.17 (gap: 1.7%)
Total Costs: Female: $477,068.45; Male: $484,610.88 (gap: 0.8%),Top awarded grants differed slightly by gender:,Females: R01 (37.7%), U01 (6.8%), P01 (6.3%),Males: R01 (41.4%), P01 (9.5%), U01 (7.2%)
No significant difference was observed in the average funding of R01 and U01 grants between genders (p > 0.05). Notably, female researchers exhibited a higher year-over-year increase in both total and average funding compared to males, with an 11.79% increase in total funding from 2022 to 2023, versus a 2.54% decline for males.

Conclusion

Despite a lower number of female NIH grant recipients and overall funding, the average funding per grant remains comparable between genders. The most funded grant types (R01, U01, P01) showed no significant funding disparities between male and female researchers. Encouragingly, female researchers demonstrated a higher annual growth in funding, suggesting potential progress toward equity in NIH grant distributions over time.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)