Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Research

3754 Brevard Rd
Suite 106, Box 19
Horse Shoe, NC 28742, USA

BRIMR Rankings of NIH Funding in 2010

as compiled by Robert Roskoski Jr.

All data are derived from NIH year-end composite data for the federal fiscal year ending 30 September 2010, as released on the NIH Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tool (RePORT).

2010 Rankings of Medical Schools and Their Departments

Total NIH Awards to each medical school in 2010

Rank of each school annually over the past decade

Total NIH Awards to all funded Medical School Departments in a given discipline

For each funded School of Medicine, lists 2010 annual rank and funding by discipline for individual departments

Basic Science Departments

Anatomy/Cell Biology
Biochemistry
Genetics
Microbiology
Neurosciences
Pharmacology
Physiology

Clinical Science Departments

Anesthesiology
Dermatology
Emergency Medicine
Family Medicine
Internal Medicine
Neurology
Neurosurgery
Obstetrics and Gynecology
Ophthalmology
Orthopedics

Otolaryngology
Pathology
Pediatrics
Physical Medicine
Psychiatry
Public Health
Radiology
Surgery
Urology

2010 Rankings of Other Health-Sciences Schools or Hospitals

Other 2010 Rankings

2010 Source Files

This 19-MB file shows BRIMR’s adaptation of NIH’s 2010 Worldwide list of awards, including R&D Contracts. Every table on this page, except the chronologic and state-population rankings, was derived entirely from this dataset.

This 10-MB file is a subset of BRIMR Worldwide_2010 that provides comprehensive award data (excluding R&D Contracts) for all Schools of Medicine that received NIH funding in 2010.

Lists total NIH funds to each PI who received them in 2010, including R&D Contracts, categorized by grantee institution, subdivision, and department.

Lists total 2010 NIH awards (excluding R&D contracts) to each funded PI, by Department and School of Medicine

All Principal Investigators Worldwide including R&D Contracts.

Science is not cold and unfeeling. In scientific investigation one becomes emotionally contained in his problem. Head, heart and hand – the three H’s of experimentation – all are involved in creativity in the medical sciences, and the combination enables us to recognize a solvable problem.

~ Charles B. Huggins

Huggins was a urologist and Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine (1966) known for his prescient quips and aphorisms.