Tom Kindlon
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Another way of looking at this:Which illness is likely to have the most grants approved:
illness A: with 100 grant applications
illness B: with zero grant applications
These aren't ridiculous figures. For some conditions in the US there would be hundreds of grant applications per year; for others there would be zero.
What about
illness A: with 100 grant applications
illness C: with one grant application
Or
illness A: with 100 grant applications
illness D: with two grant applications
In one year:
For illness A, there are 100 privately-funded research projects (by 50/100/whatever research teams)
For illness B, there are 0 privately-funded research projects (by 0 research teams)
For illness C, there is 1 privately-funded research projects (by 1 research team)
For illness D, there are 2 privately-funded research projects (by 1 or 2 research teams)
On average, there will be a lot more grant applications for illness A than B, C or D the following year.
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