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The source of this article is a NPF press release

National Parkinson Foundation Awards More Than $7.8 Million in Grants
Thursday June 2, 10:33 am ET


MIAMI, June 2 /PRNewswire/ -- The National Parkinson Foundation announces
that its Board of Directors has awarded $7,875,000 in grants for Parkinson
research, care, outreach, and education. "This is an unprecedented sum for
us to award at a single meeting," commented NPF Chairman Emeritus Nathan
Slewett. "But it constitutes the best evidence of our continuing
determination to do away with this disease and help those who must deal
with it every day of their lives." President Daniel Arty took note of the
source of the monies that made the grants possible. "Without the continuing
generosity of our donors, large and small, this historic effort could
simply not have been made," he said. As always, all NPF grants are subject
to strict requirements for reporting and accountability and forbid the use
of grant monies for overhead or administration.
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Of the $7,875,000 in grants, $4,351,181 is for research into the cause and
cure of Parkinson disease, distributed as shown immediately below. When
previously approved research monies are added in, NPF's funding of research
will total approximately $5 million. Here is the breakdown:

* $798,723 for research projects at 14 NPF Centers of Excellence in the
United States, Canada, and around the world;

* $2,892,458 in large grants for 9 targeted, time-limited, one- to three-
year preclinical or clinical studies, directly relevant to studying the
cause and cure for Parkinson disease, for which applicants have identified
very promising and exciting hypotheses, with the goal of obtaining
sufficient data to establish or refute those hypotheses and thereby
significantly advance the state of the science; and

* $560,000 for 14 high-risk, high-yield projects, preferably by beginning
scientists, provided that the projects are thoughtfully composed and
reasonably likely to advance the state of the knowledge about Parkinson
disease; and

* $100,000 for the testing of a promising neuroprotective drug under
development.

In addition, a total of $1,153,911 in grants was awarded for patient care
at 19 major hospital and academic institutions. The projects in question
range from "traditional" neurological care to deep-brain stimulation, to
interdisciplinary teams of specialists, to care-plan development, to a
movement-disorders genetic clinic, among others.

Also awarded were grants totaling $2,255,905 for outreach to be conducted
by 36 NPF Centers in the United States and Canada, as well as $113,580 in
grants to 11 NPF affiliated Chapters for support services, strategic
planning, education, and outreach.

Complete information on these and on prior grants, together with
descriptions of each grant program and project, may be obtained at the NPF
website, http://www.parkinson.org .




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Source: National Parkinson Foundation

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