UC San Diego Tops Latest National Rankings for NIH Funding
University of California San Diego School of Medicine solidified its status as a national leader in National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding, as reported by the 2023 Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Research (BRIMR) rankings. In total, the medical school received more than $460 million in NIH grants in 2023, positioning it No. 5 among public institutions and No. 13 overall.
This accords with its history — six years after its founding in 1968, the school elected to focus on research, “putting UC San Diego on a path to become one of the largest health science centers in the U.S.,” according to the San Diego Union-Tribune.
“This year’s Blue Ridge rankings underscore the vitality of scientific research at UC San Diego School of Medicine, where NIH-supported research advances innovative treatments for intractable illnesses, catalyzes new technology, and cultivates the next generation of scientists,” says Vice Chancellor for Health Sciences John M. Carethers, M.D.
“The breadth of NIH funding we receive annually is a testament to the depth and scope of the biomedical research enterprise at the medical school,” says Steven R. Garfin, M.D., interim dean of the UC San Diego School of Medicine. “To be the fifth ranked public medical school in the nation is a remarkable accomplishment for a school that opened its doors only 56 years ago with a class composed of 39 men and 8 women.”
UC San Diego School of Medicine departments ranked in the top 10 nationwide
Eight departments at UC San Diego’s School of Medicine rank in the nation’s top 10 for NIH funding to a specific department.
At the No. 1 ranked Department of Pharmacology, a multidisciplinary, cross-campus team specializing in structural and computational biology, molecular modeling, signal transduction and immunology research, drug design and state-of-the-art imaging hopes to untangle the mechanistic underpinnings of multiple human diseases to develop therapeutic treatments.
Multidisciplinary research also dominates in the Department of Neurosciences, the other No. 1 ranked UC San Diego School of Medicine department. The clinicians and scientists in the department share a commitment to neurosciences education and research with the goal of developing transformative advancements in the care of adults and children with neurological disorders.
- Neurosciences #1 (NIH funding: $41.97 million)
- Pharmacology #1 (NIH funding: $33.36 million)
- Family Medicine #2 (NIH funding: $23.12 million)
- Pediatrics #4 (NIH funding: $56.66 million)
- Psychiatry #4 (NIH funding: $57.80 million)
- OB-GYN #5 (NIH funding: $13.73 million)
- Dermatology #9 (NIH funding: $4.45 million)
- Radiology #9 (NIH funding: $19.57 million)
Top five NIH-funded principal investigators
Joseph A. Califano III, M.D., director of the Hanna and Mark Gleiberman Head and Neck Cancer Center, and professor and Iris and Matthew Strauss Chancellor’s Endowed Chair in Head and Neck Surgery, was awarded $6.8 million. Approximately $5 million is awarded to the cancer center and the remainder funds his research lab, which investigates the molecular basis of head and neck cancer.
Three University of California schools rank in top 15 nationwide
The University of California system has not one but three medical schools ranked among the top 15 in the U.S. In addition to UC San Diego (No. 13), UC San Francisco tops the list at No. 1, and UCLA ranks No. 11.