NIH Funding Drives UCSF’s Pursuit of Better Health for All

Three people look at X-rays

Research funded by the National Institutes of Health transforms patient care and buoys the Bay Area’s innovation economy.

UC San Francisco received $815 million in awards from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) last year for research that will improve the lives of patients in the U.S. and around the world.

The grants enable UCSF scientists to test new treatments for dementia and stroke, investigate the environmental causes of cancer and look for new ways to treat the world’s number one infectious disease killer, tuberculosis, which is becoming increasingly resistant to drugs.

“NIH funding is the lifeblood of our research, and it’s the reason for America’s global leadership in science and medicine,” said UCSF Chancellor Sam Hawgood, MBBS. “Our research partnership with the federal government helps us improve medical care for everyone and educate the next generation of scientists.”

The scientific innovations that come out of NIH-funded research are the main source of innovation for the biomedical industry in the San Francisco Bay Area, and the nation.

Every $1 of NIH funding creates $2.46 in economic activity, according to an analysis by United for Medical Research, a nonprofit coalition of leading research institutions, patient and health advocates and private industry.

This is especially true in the San Francisco Bay Area, which has a thriving life sciences economy. As of 2024, according to Biocom California, these industries employed 156,454 people and supported 328,000 jobs, contributing $142.7 billion to the local economy.

The grants also support the cutting-edge facilities and advanced technology that scientists need to do their work. This includes “core” genomic, imaging and computational instruments, as well as other high-tech platforms that are shared by many different researchers.

UCSF was the largest public recipient of NIH awards in 2024, and the second largest overall, according to the Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Funding. The UCSF schools of medicine, pharmacy and dentistry were first among their peers, and the school of nursing was fifth.

Read the complete story on the UCSF News website.