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  3. NIH...Turning Discovery Into Health®
  • Mission and Goals
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    • The Promise of Precision Medicine
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Our Biggest Health Challenges

Our Biggest Health Challenges

Thanks to decades of research, Americans are living longer. Yet Chronic diseases still affect large swaths of the population and are unevenly distributed creating health disparities. These chronic illness are common and costly, and many are preventable. NIH Researchers — Basic, Translation, clinical and community based — are tackling these challenges head on.

  • A doctor listening to his patient's heartbeat with a stethoscope

    Heart Disease and Stroke

    Heart disease and stroke still the leading causes of death for both U.S. men and women. NIH-funded scientists currently are looking to the power of precision medicine to better understand and manage these disorders.

  • Pancreatic Cancer Cells

    Cancer

    Cancer is one of our nation’s most feared diseases, with more than 1.6 million new cases diagnosed each year. But thanks to NIH research, this number is now falling. 

  • Hydrocodone with Acetaminophen Tablets on a Prescription Form

    Opioid Addiction

    NIH-supported research has led to effective strategies that can be implemented right now to save lives and to prevent and treat opioid addiction.

  • HIV infected and uninfected immune cells interact

    Infectious Diseases

    NIH scientists are working to better understand how microbes develop resistance to antibiotics, finding new diagnostics that can more quickly detect resistance, and finding new antibiotic drugs and vaccines to prevent and treat bacterial infections.

  • Type 2 Diabetes

    Diabetes

    Diabetes affects 30 million American adults and children. NIH-funded technological advances offer much promise.

This page last reviewed on January 21, 2025

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