Title: Office of Grants and Contracts Administration
12001 - 2002
Annual Report
- Office of Grants and Contracts Administration
The University of Alabama at Birmingham July 2002
2TABLE OF CONTENTS
3TABLE OF CONTENTS (Continued)
4Trends in Extramural Support Active Awards
- In the past year, extramural support for UAB
increased by 44,100,939, bringing total active
awards to 364,904,661 from 320,803,722. This
represents a 13.7 increase. (Exhibit I) Note
Because of the award process used by the CDC, the
information in Exhibit I does not capture the
Special Interest Projects (SIPs) which in FY01
amounted to 7,679,045 dollars resulting in
underestimates of total awards in the Departments
of Medicine (3,146,302), Psychology
(3,119,802), Health Behavior (431,327),
Occupational Therapy (336,852), Health Care
Organization Policy (241,607), Obstetrics
Gynecology (149,994), Health Services
Administration (130,806) and Oral Biology
(122,355). - The volume of awards remained steady with a total
of 1914 active awards. This represents less than
a 1 decrease from last years 1933 active
awards. (Exhibit III) - The number of active contracts in FY02 increased
slightly from 849 to 853, while the FY02 volume
of active grants decreased slightly from 1084 to
1061. (Exhibit V) - The number of awards received that exceeded
500,000 grew from 80 awards in FY01 to 90 awards
in FY02, an increase of 12.5. These awards
comprise 5 of total awards received. Forty
percent of all awards are between 100,000 and
500,000. (Exhibit VI) - The majority of awards continue to be for the
School of Medicine and the Joint Departments.
Awards to the School of Medicine represent 59.34
of all awards to UAB and awards to the Joint
Departments represent 17.9. (Table I) - The School of Medicine had the largest increase
in awarded dollars. Medicine had a growth of
more than 34 million, representing an 18.7
increase. The Joint Departments had the second
largest increase in awarded dollars growing by
more than 6 million. The School of Engineering
was the third with an increase of 3.1 million.
(Table I) - The units with the largest percentage growth in
dollars awarded since last year were UAB
Options (78.44), the School of Education
(58.57), and the School of Engineering (52.44).
(Table I)
5EXHIBIT IActive Grants and Contracts As of July
11993 - 2002
6EXHIBIT IIGrowth in Grant and Contract Awarded
Dollars1993 - 2002
7EXHIBIT IIIGrowth in Number of Active
Awards1993 - 2002
8EXHIBIT IVComparison of New Awards and
Non-Competing Continuation Awards1993 - 2002
9EXHIBIT VVolume of Grants and Contracts1993 -
2002
10EXHIBIT VIAwards Received by Size2002
11EXHIBIT VIIActive Dollars by SchoolAs of 7/1/02
12UAB Full Time Faculty as of July 1
13EXHIBIT VIIISchool of Dentistry1996 - 2002
14EXHIBIT IXActive Dollars by Department for
School of DentistryAs of 7/1/02
15EXHIBIT XSchool of Health Related
Professions1996 - 2002
16EXHIBIT XIActive Dollars by Department for
School of Health Related ProfessionsAs of 7/1/02
17EXHIBIT XIISchool of Medicine1996 - 2002
18EXHIBIT XIIIActive Dollars by Department for
School of MedicineAs of 7/1/02
19EXHIBIT XIVActive Dollars by Division for
Department of MedicineAs of 7/1/02
20EXHIBIT XVJoint Departments1996 - 2002
21EXHIBIT XVIActive Dollars by Department for
Joint DepartmentsAs of 7/1/02
The Department of Comparative Medicine was
renamed Genomics and Pathobiology.
22EXHIBIT XVIISchool of Nursing1996 - 2002
23EXHIBIT XVIIIActive Dollars by Department for
School of NursingAs of 7/1/02
24EXHIBIT XIVSchool of Optometry1996 - 2002
25EXHIBIT XXSchool of Public Health1996 - 2002
26EXHIBIT XXIActive Dollars by Department for
School of Public HealthAs of 7/1/02
27EXHIBIT XXIISchool of Arts Humanities1996 -
2002
28EXHIBIT XXIIISchool of Business1996 - 2002
29EXHIBIT XXIVActive Dollars by Department for
School of BusinessAs of 7/1/02
30EXHIBIT XXVSchool of Education1996 - 2002
31EXHIBIT XXVIActive Dollars by Department for
School of EducationAs of 7/1/02
32EXHIBIT XXVIISchool of Engineering1996 - 2002
33EXHIBIT XXVIIIActive Dollars by Department for
School of EngineeringAs of 7/1/02
The Department of Materials Mechanical
Engineering has split into two separate
departments.
34EXHIBIT XXIXSchool of Natural Science
Mathematics1996 - 2002
35EXHIBIT XXXActive Dollars by Department for
School of Natural Science MathematicsAs of
7/1/02
36EXHIBIT XXXISchool of Social Behavioral
Sciences1996 - 2002
37EXHIBIT XXXIIActive Dollars by Department for
School of Social Behavioral SciencesAs of
7/1/02
38EXHIBIT XXXIIIGraduate School1996 - 2002
39EXHIBIT XXXIVUAB Options1996 - 2002
40Trends in Indirect Cost Recovery
- This years awarded indirect cost dollars of
74,392,290 represent 25.6 of the total
extramural support dollars of 364,904,661.
(Exhibit XXXV) - The indirect cost dollars awarded rose 12.6
since last year. Awarded indirect dollars are
74,392,290 this year versus 66,074,909 last
year. Since FY99, there has been a 28.95
increase (16,702,173). (Table II) - Indirect cost recovery from philanthropic
foundations has increased steadily since 1999,
reaching 762,471 in FY02. (Table II) - Awards from Federal government agencies accounted
for the majority of indirect dollars. Federal
sources represent 84.6 (62.9 million) of the
awarded indirect cost dollars. Industry is the
second leading source of indirect cost dollars
with 9,520,719 this fiscal year. (Exhibit
XXXVI) - 95.3 of the indirect dollars were from research
projects. The remaining 4.7 came from service
and training projects. Indirect dollars from
training nearly doubled last year. (Table III) - Projects of the School of Medicine and Joint
Departments accounted for 79.93 of the awarded
indirect dollars for FY02. (Table IV) - Faculty from the Joint departments account for
only 9 of total faculty but generated 23 of the
indirect dollars awarded in FY02. (Table IV) - Since FY99, the awarded indirect dollars for the
School of Medicine has increased by over 12.7
million, the single largest dollar increase for
any of the schools. Joint Departments had the
second largest growth in indirect dollars since
FY99 with an increase of 3.5 million. (Table
IV) - The School of Medicine, the Joint Departments,
the School of Optometry, and the Graduate School
contribute the largest percentage of indirect
dollars relative to full time faculty
appointments. (Table IV)
41EXHIBIT XXXVDirect and Indirect Awarded Dollars
7/1/02
42Federal sponsor type includes federal dollars as
well as federal dollars passed down to UAB
through a non-federal agency.
43EXHIBIT XXXVIDistribution of Awarded Indirect
Dollars by Sponsor TypeAs of 7/1/02
Federal sponsor type includes federal dollars as
well as federal dollars passed down to UAB
through a non-federal agency.
44Federal sponsor type includes federal dollars as
well as federal dollars passed down to UAB
through a non-federal agency.
45UAB Full Time Faculty as of July 1
46EXHIBIT XXXVIIAwarded Direct and Indirect
Dollars by School 7/1/02
47Trends in Proposal Submission
- The School of Medicine and the Joint Departments
submitted the largest number of proposals this
fiscal year (a total of 2,054) and had the
largest amount of dollars requested
(985,591,363). This represented an 18.9 growth
in dollars requested and a 6.4 growth in volume.
The Joint Departments account for 9 of the full
time faculty but 18.4 of the proposals
submitted, 21.8 of the dollars requested, and
17.9 of the dollars awarded. (Tables V and VI) - Of the ten departments with the largest number of
proposals submitted, seven were in the School of
Medicine, two were in the Joint Departments, and
one was in the School of Engineering. These ten
departments account for 40 of all submissions.
(Table VII) - The volume of proposals submitted rose from 2,761
last year to 2,878, a 4.2 increase. Since FY99,
there has been a 12.5 increase in submissions.
(Exhibit XXXVIII) - The volume of proposals submitted to non-federal
sponsors rose from 1,011 in FY01 to 1,117 in
FY02, an increase of 10.5. The volume of
proposals to the federal government rose slightly
from 1,750 in FY01 to 1,761 in FY02. (Exhibit
XXXVIII) - UAB faculty have a high success rate for the
proposals submitted for extramural funding across
all sponsor types. The highest rates of award
versus proposals submitted are for proposals
submitted to industry sponsors (88.3 awarded),
the State of Alabama (77.1 awarded), and local
agencies (70.8 awarded). These high rates
probably result from the fact that proposals are
rarely submitted to these sponsors without
preliminary contacts having been made. The
success rate of UAB proposals submitted to the
federal government is an impressive 48.7. The
statistics quoted are for FY01, the latest year
with complete data. The numbers do not include
proposals for non-competing continuations,
supplements, and revisions. (Table VIII) - Proposals to the DOD have increased by 42.8 over
the past three years. This is the largest
increase in proposal submission to any of UABs
leading sponsors. (Table IX)
48UAB Full Time Faculty as of July 1
49UAB Full Time Faculty as of July 1
50TABLE VII
51EXHIBIT XXXVIIIProposals Processed1993 - 2002
Federal sponsor type includes federal dollars as
well as federal dollars passed down to UAB
through a non-federal agency.
52EXHIBIT XXXIXProposals Submitted by Type1993 -
2002
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55Trends in Sponsor Support
- Federal government grants and contracts continue
to dominate as sources of extramural support to
UAB. (Exhibit XL) Dollars from federal sources
have increased over 30 since FY99, and
constitute 75.2 of the total dollars awarded in
2002. (Table X) - Clinical trial awards accounted for 42,621,362
in awarded dollars. Federal awards accounted for
51.2 of the total and industry-sponsored awards
for 46. The number of clinical trials has
declined by 23.6 since FY98. (Table XI) - Federal dollars for research projects accounted
for 69.4 of UABs extramural support and
non-federal funds for research represented 20.3.
Service and training dollars, both federal and
non-federal, composed the remaining 10.3.
(Table XII) - Federal support for training has increased by
2.2 million since FY99. (Table XII) - The majority of UABs extramural support
continues to come from NIH. Since last year, NIH
funds to UAB have risen approximately 24
million, representing a 13.3 increase in one
year. (Exhibit XLII) - Since FY97 NIH funding has grown 69.6, an
increase of 85.6 million. During this same
five-year period, funds from non-federal sources
have risen 41.4, an increase of 26.4 million.
(Exhibit XLII) - Within the NIH, the institutes providing the
largest amount of funding to UAB are NIAID, NCI,
and NHLBI. (Exhibit XLIII). In terms of the
percentage of available dollars awarded for FY01,
the leading NIH sponsors were the Fogarty
International Center, NIAMS, NIAID, and NICHD.
(Table XIII) - The leading industry sponsor for the past three
years has been Sankyo Co., LTD. (Table XIV)
56EXHIBIT XLDistribution of Awarded Dollars by
Sponsor TypeAs of 7/1/02
Federal sponsor type includes federal dollars as
well as federal dollars passed down to UAB
through a non-federal agency.
57Federal sponsor type includes federal dollars as
well as federal dollars passed down to UAB
through a non-federal agency.
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59Federal sponsor type includes federal dollars as
well as federal dollars passed down to UAB
through a non-federal agency.
60EXHIBIT XLIFederal Funding Trends by
Purpose1993 - 2002
Federal sponsor type includes federal dollars as
well as federal dollars passed down to UAB
through a non-federal agency.
61EXHIBIT XLIIExtramural Funding Trends by
Source1993 - 2002
62EXHIBIT XLIIISources of Health and Human
Services Funding to UAB July 1, 2002
HHS Funding
NIH Funding
Dollars in Millions
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65TABLE XV