FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
APS Contact
Christine Guilfoy
Office: (301) 634-7253
cguilfoy@the-aps.org
APS Urges Greater Research
Funding For NSF, NASA
WASHINGTON – (April 24, 2007) Hannah V.
Carey, the president-elect of The American Physiological Society (APS)
and a professor of comparative biosciences at the University of Wisconsin
School of Veterinary Medicine in Madison, called on Congress today to
increase the fiscal 2008 research budgets of the National Science Foundation
(NSF) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
“The NSF is an agency that excels at its mission, and
the APS has enjoyed a long partnership with the agency,” Carey said. “This
year, we join with the Federation of American Societies for Experimental
Biology in calling for an increase that would bring the NSF budget to a
total of $6.5 billion in FY 2008.” Her request is an increase of 9 percent
over fiscal 2007.
The NSF supports 20 percent of all federally funded
basic science and is the major source of support for non-medical biology
research, Dr. Carey said today in her testimony before the House
Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, and Science.
“The majority of the funding NSF provides is awarded
through competitive, merit-based peer review, which ensures that the best
possible projects are supported,” Dr. Carey said. “This has resulted in an
excellent record of accomplishment in terms of funding research that has
produced results with far-reaching potential.”
NASA life sciences budget
at issue
Dr. Carey also recommended that Congress increase the
NASA budget an additional $39.5 million. The NASA budget for life science
research has dropped from approximately $1 billion in fiscal 2005 to $274
million in fiscal 2007.
“These cuts erode the capacity to conduct the
experiments necessary to safely achieve goals that involve long-duration
manned spaceflight,” Dr. Carey said. Research is needed to understand the
effects of prolonged weightlessness, increased levels of radiation,
disruption of sleep patterns and restricted movement, before space travel
can be undertaken safely. This research can advance understanding of human
responses to space and may also result in medical advances here on earth,
she said.
* * *
Members of the media who want to interview Dr. Carey or
obtain the complete text of her testimony, should contact Christine Guilfoy
at The American Physiological Society, (301) 634-7253 or
cguilfoy@the-aps.org.
***
Physiology
is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs function to create
health or disease. The American Physiological Society has been an integral
part of this scientific discovery process since it was established in 1887.
The Society has 10,500 members and publishes 11 peer-reviewed
journals containing almost 4,000 articles annually.
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