
Ghent (Eurotoday) – Ghent University Hospital’s HIV research centre is facing the potential loss of over €1.3 million in funding from the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) due to concerns over financial reporting, placing vital HIV research and associated jobs at serious risk. Professors Linos and Frank Vandekerckhove are calling for urgent intervention.
According to a report by VRT News, Ghent University Hospital’s HIV centre is engaged in groundbreaking work to cure HIV and develop more effective treatments. The team is currently managing four major projects aimed at advancing global HIV care. However, these efforts are now under threat after the NIH suspended funding exceeding €1.3 million due to irregularities in subsidy reporting.
The NIH has temporarily halted funding while it reviews and rectifies the procedures concerning financial disclosures. This decision has raised concerns about delays in the development of new treatments and cures, creating uncertainty for the future of international HIV research.
Will the €1.3M NIH funding cut halt HIV research in Ghent?
Professor Linos Vandekerckhove, head of the HIV research centre, highlighted the difficult position their American counterparts now face. U.S. teams are permitted to continue working independently of their European partners and retain their funding. However, if they determine the research cannot proceed effectively without international collaboration, the NIH may pull the funding entirely.
He noted that this presents major challenges for global research partnerships like the one at Ghent. Without the NIH funding, critical HIV research could be delayed or discontinued—hindering worldwide efforts to combat the virus. The centre now faces a dilemma, as the funding shortfall endangers both scientific progress and staff employment.
“The suspension of funding is happening without even looking at the progress and results of the scientific research. The plug has simply been pulled,”
Professor Frank Vandekerckhove also expressed concern over the potential disruption to a major research initiative in Ghent that monitors treatment responses in HIV patients through blood sample analysis. Should the funding be withdrawn, this crucial work would come to a halt.
He warned that the loss of funding may force the centre to lay off staff, deeply affecting ongoing research. Without support from the government or Ghent University, these job cuts could become unavoidable. Vandekerckhove has urged university leadership to collaborate with the Flemish Interuniversity Council to find a sustainable solution that protects both scientific research and employment.
“Finding new funding takes time, and putting a study ‘On hold’ where you follow up patients is not something that can be done easily.”
Frank Bosmans, professor of neuroscience at the VUB
The implications of the NIH’s suspension of funding reach beyond Ghent’s HIV research. Similar concerns have been voiced for neurological and clinical studies at institutions such as KU Leuven and Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB). Professor Frank Bosmans of VUB cautioned that delays or interruptions to ongoing studies—especially those involving patients—can have long-term negative effects, as replacing funding is often a slow and complex process.
Comments
7 responses to “Ghent HIV Center Faces €1.3M NIH Funding Cut, Threatening Research”
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Just what we needed, right? A €1.3 million funding cut to really spice up our “groundbreaking” HIV research in Ghent. Seems like someone at the NIH took “financial transparency” a tad too seriously—next time, they could just send a postcard instead!
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Looks like Ghent’s HIV center is getting a crash course in financial reporting instead of groundbreaking research—who knew paperwork was the new cutting-edge science?
With €1.3M at stake, maybe they should just slap a “Made in America” label on their reports and call it a day!
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Just what we needed! A €1.3 million funding cut to spice things up at the Ghent HIV Center—because who doesn’t love a bit of drama in scientific research?
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Oh, brilliant! Just what we needed—another round of funding cuts to remind us that saving lives doesn’t quite compare to balancing the books. Maybe we should just put a sign outside the Ghent HIV Center: “Cash Only, No Cures!”
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Oh, brilliant! Just what we need—cutting €1.3M from HIV research in Ghent while our American pals keep their pockets lined. Must be nice to play hardball with life-saving science… who needs cures when you’ve got bureaucracy, right?
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Looks like Ghent’s HIV research centre is in a bit of a pickle with the NIH cutting €1.3M—who knew financial reporting could be such a buzzkill for scientific breakthroughs?
Guess they’ll just have to invent a time machine to fix it all, right?
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Oh great, just what we need—€1.3 million less for HIV research in Ghent! Because who wouldn’t want to see groundbreaking work halted, right?
It’s like making a fine wine and then deciding, “Nah, let’s just drink grape juice instead!”
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