logo
NIH employees publish ‘Bethesda Declaration' in dissent of Trump administration policies

NIH employees publish ‘Bethesda Declaration' in dissent of Trump administration policies

Yahoo09-06-2025
In October 2020, two months before Covid-19 vaccines would become available in the US, Stanford health policy professor Dr. Jay Bhattacharya and two colleagues published an open letter calling for a contrarian approach to managing the risks of the pandemic: protecting the most vulnerable while allowing others largely to resume normal life, aiming to obtain herd immunity through infection with the virus.
They called it the Great Barrington Declaration, for the Massachusetts town where they signed it. Backlash to it was swift, with the director-general of the World Health Organization calling the idea of allowing a dangerous new virus to sweep through unprotected populations 'unethical.' Bhattacharya later testified before Congress that it – and he – immediately became targets of suppression and censorship by those leading scientific agencies.
Now, Bhattacharya is the one in charge, and staffers at the agency he leads, the US National Institutes of Health, published their own letter of dissent, taking issue with what they see as the politicization of research and destruction of scientific progress under the Trump administration. They called it the Bethesda Declaration, for the location of the NIH.
'We hope you will welcome this dissent, which we modeled after your Great Barrington Declaration,' the staffers wrote. The letter was signed by more than 300 employees across the biomedical research agency, according to the non-profit organization Stand Up for Science, which also posted it; while many employees signed anonymously because of fears of retaliation, nearly 100 - from graduate students to division chiefs - signed by name.
It comes the day before Bhattacharya is due to testify before Congress once more, in a budget hearing to be held Tuesday by the Senate appropriations committee. It's just the latest sign of strife from inside the NIH, where some staff last month staged a walkout of a townhall with Bhattacharya to protest working conditions and an inability to discuss them with the director.
'If we don't speak up, we allow continued harm to research participants and public health in America and across the globe,' said Dr. Jenna Norton, a program officer at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and a lead organizer of the Declaration, in a news release from Stand Up for Science. She emphasized she was speaking in a personal capacity, not on behalf of the NIH.
The letter, which the staffers said they also sent to US Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and members of Congress who oversee the NIH, urged Bhattacharya to 'restore grants delayed or terminated for political reasons so that life-saving science can continue,' citing work in areas including health disparities, Covid-19, health impacts of climate change and others.
They cited findings by two scientists that said about 2,100 NIH grants for about $9.5 billion have been terminated since the second Trump administration began. The NIH budget had been about $48 billion annually, and the Trump administration has proposed cutting it next year by about 40%.
The research terminations 'throw away years of hard work and millions of dollars,' the NIH staffers wrote. 'Ending a $5 million research study when it is 80% complete does not save $1 million, it wastes $4 million.'
They also urged Bhattacharya to reverse a policy that aims to implement a new, and lower, flat 15% rate for paying for indirect costs of research at universities, which supports shared lab space, buildings, instruments and other infrastructure, as well as the firing of essential NIH staff.
Those who wrote the Bethesda Declaration were joined Monday by outside supporters, in a second letter posted by Stand Up for Science and signed by members of the public, including more than a dozen Nobel Prize-winning scientists.
'We urge NIH and Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) leadership to work with NIH staff to return the NIH to its mission and to abandon the strategy of using NIH as a tool for achieving political goals unrelated to that mission,' they wrote.
The letter called for the grant-making process to be conducted by scientifically trained NIH staff, guided by rigorous peer review, not by 'anonymous individuals outside of NIH.'
It also challenged assertions put forward by Kennedy, who often compares today's health outcomes with those around the time his uncle John F. Kennedy was president, in the early 1960s.
'Since 1960, the death rate due to heart disease has been cut in half, going from 560 deaths per 100,000 people to approximately 230 deaths per 100,000 today,' they wrote. 'From 1960 to the present day, the five-year survival rate for childhood leukemia has increased nearly 10-fold, to over 90% for some forms. In 1960, the rate of measles infection was approximately 250 cases per 100,000 people compared with a near zero rate now (at least until recently).'
They acknowledged there's still much work to do, including addressing obesity, diabetes and opioid dependency, 'but,' they wrote, 'glamorizing a mythical past while ignoring important progress made through biomedical research does not enhance the health of the American people.'
Support from the NIH, they argued, made the US 'the internationally recognized hub for biomedical research and training,' leading to major advances in improving human health.
'I've never heard anybody say, 'I'm just so frustrated that the government is spending so much money on cancer research, or trying to address Alzheimer's,' ' said Dr. Jeremy Berg, who organized the letter of outside support and previously served as director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences at the NIH.
'Health concerns are a universal human concern,' Berg told CNN. 'The NIH system is not perfect by any stretch of the imagination, but has been unbelievably productive in terms of generating progress on specific diseases.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump signs megabill that slashes taxes, Medicaid while boosting national debt
Trump signs megabill that slashes taxes, Medicaid while boosting national debt

USA Today

time37 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Trump signs megabill that slashes taxes, Medicaid while boosting national debt

President Donald Trump capped the whirlwind opening stretch of his second term with a Fourth of July signing ceremony for his signature legislation, reveling in pushing the megabill through a fractious Congress and delivering on multiple campaign promises. The measure cements into law much of Trump's agenda and is being hailed by the president and his supporters as a major victory. It includes tax cuts, increased spending on immigration enforcement and the military and deep spending reductions to Medicaid that Democrats and some Republicans have strongly criticized. But with the furious legislative debate behind him, Trump was ebullient as he signed what he has dubbed the 'Big beautiful bill' into law during a White House ceremony that included legislative leaders and a flyover from military planes. 'It's really promises made, promises kept,' Trump said, addressing a crowd of supporters gathered on the White House South Lawn, his wife at his side. Trump sketched out some of the broad strokes of the bill on the campaign trail as he proposed to cut taxes on tipped wages and overtime pay and greatly expand immigration enforcement and deportation efforts. The legislation does that, and a lot more. It extends the 2017 tax cuts that Trump passed and were set to expire at the end of the year and has many other provisions, including reducing taxes on corporations and large estates, boosting the child tax credit, increasing the deduction for state and local taxes to $40,000 and eliminating dozens of green energy incentives. The bill reduces tax revenues by roughly $4.5 trillion over 10 years, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. In the process, it adds $3.4 trillion to the national debt over a decade, according to CBO, and includes a $5 trillion increase in the debt ceiling. CBO projects it will result in 12 million people losing health insurance, while the Senate Joint Economic Committee Minority estimates that about 20 million people could lose coverage. Medicaid is being cut by nearly $1 trillion. Different factions of Republicans took aim at the bill, with some complaining about the Medicaid cuts and other arguing the legislation didn't go far enough to cut spending. Yet the nearly 900-page legislation cleared Congress less than six months into Trump's second term, allowing him to quickly put in place the centerpiece of his agenda. Since reclaiming the White House, the president has moved aggressively to implement his priorities, from overhauling the federal government to mass deportations. Trump has relied heavily on executive orders to accomplish his goals, which can be reversed if a Democrat wins the presidency. The legislation he signed July 4 could be a more lasting legacy. He was able to hold together a GOP caucus that at times seemed poised to buck him, but ultimately fell in line, once again demonstrating the president's immense influence within his party. 'I think I have more power now,' Trump said after the bill passed, in discussing his sway with congressional Republicans. The legislation narrowly cleared the Senate, with three Republicans breaking ranks to vote against it and the chamber ending in a tie vote that was broken by Vice President JD Vance, resulting in a 51-50 margin. It passed the House 218-214 with two Republicans opposed. Democrats were united against the measure, saying that it disproportionately benefits the wealthy and hurts lower-income Americans. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-New York, laid out these concerns in a marathon address that broke the record for longest House speech. "I rise today in strong opposition to Donald Trump's disgusting abomination… that guts Medicaid, rips food from the mouths of children, seniors and veterans, and rewards billionaires with massive tax breaks," Jeffries said. The legislative drama will now give way to a political messaging battle over the legislation. Trump and his allies predict it will turbocharge the economy and ultimately benefit the party, even as polls show it's unpopular. "It's going to make this country into a rocket ship," Trump told reporters June 3. Former Trump White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer called the legislation "a massive legislative and political victory' and said passing it now allows time for its effects to 'marinate into the economy and I think will be a huge bonus for Republicans in both chambers running" in the 2026 midterm election. 'The consequence and effects of this bill will be baked into the economy for 18 months and I believe spur economic growth, job creation' Spicer said. Some Republicans are nervous about political fallout, though. North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis opposed the bill because of the Medicaid provisions. In a Senate floor speech criticizing the legislation, Tillis attributed his rise to U.S. senator to blowback against former President Barack Obama's 2010 health care law, the Affordable Care Act, which fueled crushing Democratic losses across the country. The GOP is now rushing into similarly perilous territory, Tillis implied, by cutting Medicaid. Contributing: Sarah Wire, Phillip Bailey, Reuters

Trump signs ‘big, beautiful bill' into law
Trump signs ‘big, beautiful bill' into law

The Hill

time37 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Trump signs ‘big, beautiful bill' into law

President Trump on Friday signed a massive reconciliation package that will extend tax cuts and phase-in cuts to Medicaid, finalizing a significant legislative victory for his administration after months of difficult negotiations with Republicans on Capitol Hill. Trump signed the one big, beautiful bill into law at a military family picnic at the White House for the Fourth of July. Trump and his aides had long pegged Independence Day as a deadline for when they hoped to see the legislation on his desk, a timeline that appeared in peril just days ago. 'We made promises, and it's really promises made, promises kept, and we've kept them,' Trump said from the balcony overlooking the South Lawn of the White House. 'This is a triumph of democracy on the birthday of democracy. And I have to say, the people are happy.' Friday's ceremony was attended by first lady Melania Trump, several Cabinet officials and numerous Republican lawmakers, including Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.), House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) and Rep. Jason Smith (R-Mo.). The event was marked by other flourishes, including a flyover of two B-2 bombers, the same type of planes that carried out strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities last month. The Senate passed its version of the bill early Tuesday morning, with Vice President Vance breaking a 50-50 tie after three Republicans voted no. The House passed the bill without making any changes on Thursday afternoon after an hours-long slog to persuade a number of holdouts on a procedural vote. The final vote in the House was 218-214. Two Republicans voted against it. Friday's signing was an exclamation point to what has been a positive stretch for Trump in terms of foreign policy accomplishments, a strong jobs report and historic low numbers of apprehensions at the southern border. 'We've I think had probably the most successful almost six months as a president and the presidency,' Trump said. 'I think they're saying it was the best six months, and I know for a fact they're saying the last two weeks, there has never been anything like it as far as winning, winning, winning.' The legislation contains numerous major campaign promises from Trump's 2024 bid for the White House. It extends the tax cuts Trump signed into law in 2017, which were set to expire later this year. It also eliminates some taxes on tipped wages and increases the state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap, which had emerged as one of the thorniest sticking points throughout negotiations. The bill provides a $150 billion increase in funding for a border wall, immigration enforcement and deportations. It provides $150 billion in new defense spending for priorities like shipbuilding and a 'Golden Dome' missile defense project. It cuts incentives that promote green energy and expands domestic production of oil, coal and natural gas. It will hike the debt ceiling by $5 trillion, forestalling the threat of a federal default. Democrats have seized on how the bill contains cuts to low-income health and nutrition programs — reductions designed to help offset the loss of revenues from the tax cuts but that are also expected to eliminate health coverage for millions of people. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-Calif.) delivered a historically long speech on Friday railing against the bill and warning that it would hurt working families. Trump on Friday mocked Jeffries and dismissed Democratic criticisms as a 'con job.' White House officials have similarly waved off negative polling on the bill and argued the public will have a positive view of the legislation once Republicans have time to educate constituents on what's in it.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store