Today the American Brain Foundation is pleased to announce the recipients of its 2019 grants to the best and brightest early-career researchers pursuing cures for diseases and disorders of the brain.
MINNEAPOLIS, /PRNewswire/ -- Today the American Brain Foundation is pleased to announce the recipients of its 2019 grants to the best and brightest early-career researchers pursuing cures for diseases and disorders of the brain. The Foundation awards these grants in partnership with prominent national brain disease organizations. A total of $2,377,000 is being awarded to 15 next generation researchers investigating 11 different diseases. 1 in 6 people is affected by brain disease—nearly 80 million Americans. The annual economic burden to American society of the nine most common brain diseases and disorders is over $800 billion. This number will continue to grow until better treatments and cures for brain diseases and disorders are discovered. It is anticipated that the annual cost of Alzheimer’s disease alone will increase from $277 billion to over $1.1 trillion by 2050. That is why the American Brain Foundation invests in early-career investigators, funding their innovative clinical research to find cures for brain diseases and disorders, and helping them to build a track record of success to assure future funding from the NIH and others. The 2019 award recipients are listed below, along with the funding partners who have made generous investments to build the next generation of brain disease researchers. McKnight Clinical Translational Research Scholarship in Cognitive Aging and Age-Related Memory Loss – Two awarded at $150,000 over 2 years Susan S. Spencer Clinical Research Training Scholarship in Epilepsy - $150,000 over 2 years Clinical Research Training Scholarship in ALS - $150,000 over 2 years Clinical Research Training Scholarship in Headache - $130,000 over 2 years Clinician Scientist Development Award in Interventional Neurology - $240,000 over 3 years Clinical Research Training Scholarship in Tourette Syndrome - $150,000 over 2 years Clinical Research Training Scholarship in Multiple Sclerosis - $150,000 over 2 years Clinician Scientist Development Award in Multiple Sclerosis - $240,000 over 3 years Clinician Scientist Development Award in Myasthenia Gravis - $240,000 over 3 years Clinical Research Training Scholarship in Neuromuscular Disease - $150,000 over 2 years Clinical Research Training Scholarship in Parkinson’s Disease - $150,000 over 2 years Clinical Research Training Scholarship in Parkinson’s Disease - $150,000 over 2 years Robert W. Katzman, MD, Clinical Research Training Scholarship in Alzheimer’s and Dementia Research - $150,000 over 2 years Richard Olney Clinician Scientist Development Award in ALS - $240,000 over 3 years About the American Brain Foundation: The American Brain Foundation brings researchers and donors together to cure brain diseases and disorders. The Foundation invests in research of the whole brain and all nervous system disorders knowing they are interconnected. This holistic, innovative approach allows the Foundation to build bridges between diseases and break new ground in research and application. The Foundation understands that when we cure one brain disease, we will cure many. For more information about the American Brain Foundation, visit https://www.AmericanBrainFoundation.org or find us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/investing-in-the-next-generation-of-brain-disease-researchers-300815507.html SOURCE American Brain Foundation |