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Global health R&D delivers for Washington D.C.

US government investment in global health R&D has delivered

Amount
$317.9 million
to Washington D.C. research institutions
Jobs
800+ new jobs
for Washington D.C.
Washington D.C.'s top USG-funded global health R&D institutions

Washington D.C.'s top USG-funded global health R&D institutions

US Department of the Interior (self-funding or other agency transfers)
$90.4 million
Sabin Vaccine Institute
$48.1 million
George Washington University
$46.8 million
Interior Business Center (formerly the National Business Center)
$21.9 million
Georgetown University
$19.2 million
US Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (self-funding or other agency transfers)
$15.4 million
US General Services Administration (self-funding or other agency transfers)
$15.3 million
Children’s National Hospital (including medical centers)
$8.5 million
US Department of Energy (self-funding or other agency transfers)
$8.5 million
Academy for Educational Development (AED)*
$4 million
US Department of Veterans Affairs (self-funding or other agency transfers)
$3.8 million
The Catholic University of America
$2.1 million
US Agency for International Development (self-funding or other agency transfers)
$1.4 million
The Mitchell Group Inc.
$1.1 million
Howard University
$1 million
Veterans Health Administration (self-funding or other agency transfers)
$986 thousand
US Department of Homeland Security (self-funding or other agency transfers)
$366 thousand
US Army Corps of Engineers (self-funding or other agency transfers)
$214 thousand
US Department of State (self-funding or other agency transfers)
$127 thousand
American Society for Microbiology
$14 thousand

Washington D.C.'s top areas of global health R&D by USG funding

15.2%
Flioviral diseases (including Ebola, Marburg)
55.7%
HIV/AIDS
5.9%
Malaria
7.9%
Neglected tropical diseases
Dengue
Helminth infections (Worms & Flukes)
Kinetoplastid diseases
2.2%
Reproductive health
9.8%
Tuberculosis
3.4%
Other
Chikungunya
COVID-19
Diarrheal diseases
Henipaviral diseases (including Nipah)
Multi-disease/health area R&D
Salmonella infections
Zika
Global health R&D at work in Washington D.C.

George Washington University is one of four US sites that participated in the phase 1 clinical trial of the first mRNA vaccines for HIV in partnership with the study’s sponsor, IAVI. The two vaccine antigens being tested, which use the same technology as mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, train the body’s immune system to recognize the protein on the surface of HIV particles and develop broadly neutralizing antibodies that protect against a wide range of HIV strains. Early results from the study showed that the experimental vaccine is safe and elicited a robust immune response in people. If further studies provide successful, we could see mRNA technology, which was critical during the COVID-19 pandemic, play a major role in the longstanding fight against HIV/AIDS. Since the beginning of the AIDS epidemic, at least 40 million people have died of AIDS and globally, 39 million people currently live with HIV.

Footnotes
  • Methodology
  • US government global health R&D investment (total to state, top funded institutions, top health areas): Authors’ analysis of USG investment data from the G-FINDER survey following identification of state location of funding recipients. Reflects funding for basic research and product development for neglected diseases from 2007 to 2022, for emerging infectious diseases from 2014–2022, and sexual and reproductive health issues from 2018 to 2022. Funding to US government agencies reflects self-funding and/or transfers from other agencies. Some industry data is anonymized and aggregated. See methodology for additional details.
  • *Organization appears to be closed/out of business.
  • Jobs created: Based on author’s analysis described above and previous analysis assessing jobs created per state from US National Institutes of Health funding. See methodology for additional details.
  • Neglected and emerging diseases: Reflects US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data for: Chikungunya virus cases 2014–2022, Dengue virus infection cases 2010-2021, HIV diagnoses 2008–2022, Malaria cases 2007–2022, Mpox cases 2022–March 29, 2023, Tuberculosis cases 2007–2021, Viral hemorrhagic fever cases 2007-2022, and Zika virus disease cases 2015–2021.
  • Case study photo: FDA/Michael J. Ermarth