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Research Funding

TOTAL SPONSORED AWARDS - State FY 24                                                                                 TOTAL FEDERAL AWARDS - State FY 24
$217.3 MILLION                                                                                                                                $132.8 MILLION


OU Health Sciences has achieved its highest-ever ranking in the Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Research rankings, reaching No. 102 nationally for NIH funding—a 27-spot climb in two years—placing it among the top 3.6% of institutions receiving NIH support. With $75.2 million in NIH funding in FY2024, this recognition reflects the dedication of faculty, researchers, and staff in advancing biomedical and clinical research that improves patient outcomes and strengthens the university’s impact. 


OU Health Sciences Rises in Ranking of NIH Research Funding

OU Health Sciences Rises in Ranking of NIH Research Funding


Published: Wednesday, March 6, 2024

The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences grew its funding from the National Institutes of Health to $64.4 million in 2022-23, an increase of more than $4 million over the previous year. That improves the campus’s ranking to 122 out of 2,886 institutions and other entities that receive NIH funding. The listing is compiled by the Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Research, which is regarded as the gold standard for ranking biomedical research institutions. Funding from the NIH is considered the key benchmark for research productivity and reputation for health sciences.

OU Health Sciences is the largest research institution in Oklahoma and is one of only a few comprehensive research universities in the nation to have six health professional colleges and an interdisciplinary Graduate College on the same campus. Strategic research areas are cancer, diabetes, neurosciences and vision, infectious diseases and geroscience.

Notable NIH grants awarded in 2022-23 include $20.3 million over five years to fund the Oklahoma Shared Clinical and Translational Resources, a program that collaborates with more than 30 state agencies, tribes, community organizations, research institutes and universities. Together, they work to improve health care and facilitate research into the major conditions that burden Oklahomans, including cancer, obesity, cardiovascular disease, autoimmunity, diabetes and arthritis. This is the third successful competitive funding cycle for the OSCTR.

For the first time in state history, researchers at OU Health Sciences received NIH funding through a Specialized Programs of Research Excellence (SPORE) grant. The five-year, $11.6 million grant will allow OU researchers, along with research programs at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the University of New Mexico, to conduct a variety of studies, including clinical trials, on the prevention and treatment of endometrial cancer.

A $10.5 million grant over seven years will allow researchers to study the causes of increased death and disease among Indigenous women. The work of the grant will be the creation of CIRCLE — the Center for Indigenous Resilience, Culture, and Maternal Health Equity — to serve Oklahoma and the Southern Plains. OU’s Fran and Earl Ziegler College of Nursing is leading the work of the grant.

Researchers studying Clostridioides difficile, or C. difficile, received a five-year, $6.5 million grant to better understand how the bacterium thwarts a person’s immune system, particularly in those who are hospitalized. The grant brings together a team of researchers to target their joint efforts on C. difficile infection.

“OU Health Sciences’ national ranking of 122nd in NIH funding represents our ongoing commitment to making high-impact discoveries that will benefit the people of Oklahoma and beyond,” said OU Health Sciences Vice President for Research Darrin Akins, Ph.D. “Increasing our research funding is a priority goal for OU Health Sciences and is at the heart of our mission of improving health and reducing health disparities in our state.”

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About the University of Oklahoma
Founded in 1890, the University of Oklahoma is a public research university located in Norman, Oklahoma. As the state’s flagship university, OU serves the educational, cultural, economic and health care needs of the state, region and nation. OU was named the state’s highest-ranking university in U.S. News & World Report’s most recent Best Colleges list. For more information about the university, visit www.ou.edu.

Research Newsletter

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June 9, 2025, Newsletter Highlights

This week's full newsletter and documents to download

TSET Legacy Grants are due on Monday, June 16th by Noon.  Due to the number of OUHSC applicants ALL TSET Legacy Grants will have a five (5) day deadline for submission to ORA for review.

The complete SoonerTrack ticket and the Stage I Proposal will be due to ORA no later than Noon on Monday, June 9th.  Applications will be reviewed in the order they are received.

WORKSHOPS AND SEMINARS

The Single Cell RNA Sequencing Workshopis a free, in-person, hands-on course held December 9–12, 2025, at the Inasmuch Foundation Atrium in the Bird Library. It will teach participants how to perform single-cell RNA sequencing analysis, including data alignment, visualization (UMAPs, heatmaps, volcano plots), and advanced analyses like ligand-receptor interactions, pathway, and pseudotime. The workshop uses bash and R and requires attendance at all three full-day sessions. Data will be provided. Around 20 applicants will be accepted; applications are due by July 31, 2025, with decisions sent by August 15. Full details and requirements are in the flyer.

The Native Nations Center for Tribal Policy Research (NNCTPR), would like to announce an event that the NNCTPR, in collaboration with Tana Fitzpatrick, Associate Vice President of Tribal Relations, and the Center for Faculty Excellence will host as part of our Ethical Tribal Engagement Series. This event will be held on Tuesday, June 17, 2025 12:00 to 1:30 at the Robert M. Bird Library Inasmuch Foundation Atrium room on the OUHSC campus as well as virtually. This ETE traveling event will be offered as part of the Improving Cancer Outcomes in Native American Communities (ICON) Grant.   

Inaugural Annual Neurology Research Symposium – Hosted by the Department of Neurology, University of Oklahoma, School of Medicine – Date & Location: Friday, June 13, 2025, at the Basic Sciences Education Building (West Lecture Hall).   

This year’s theme is Vascular Cognitive Impairment (VCI), with a keynote lecture by Farzaneh A. Sorond, MD, alongside presentations from leading researchers in the field. The event will include panel sessions, oral and poster presentations, and networking opportunities.

Visit for more information: https://medicine.ouhsc.edu/academic-departments/neurology/neurology-symposium

Registration is now open – https://medicine.ouhsc.edu/academic-departments/neurology/neurology-symposium/registration