(Total Views: 548)
Posted On: 11/15/2025 3:29:18 AM
Post# of 158771
I don't see you doing any research of your own here, NJA. You're busy saying Oy and Grrr and calling what I'm saying crap, pretty much without checking it out.
When a place like Cornell Weill has funding cut, there are such things as indirect costs -- basically, running the place -- that can affect all the trials at the place. Instead of blaming management, which is what you are doing, I believe there has been a general slowdown at Cornell. Which makes sense, given the amount of funding taken away from the place.
I asked Chat if a privately funded Alzheimer's trial at Cornell might have been delayed.
Federal decisions have consequences for everyone, pretty much. Even unhinged decisions.
When a place like Cornell Weill has funding cut, there are such things as indirect costs -- basically, running the place -- that can affect all the trials at the place. Instead of blaming management, which is what you are doing, I believe there has been a general slowdown at Cornell. Which makes sense, given the amount of funding taken away from the place.
I asked Chat if a privately funded Alzheimer's trial at Cornell might have been delayed.
Quote:b]
Short answer: Not only military, cancer and avian-flu projects were affected — clinical trials and other disease research were disrupted too. But a privately funded Alzheimer’s trial would only be directly stopped if it relied on a frozen federal contract or on services that were under stop-work orders; otherwise it could still be indirectly be delayed (staffing, IRB/site capacity, lab space, vendor support, billing/payroll, or institutional hiring/funding freezes).[/
Federal decisions have consequences for everyone, pretty much. Even unhinged decisions.