Making matters even murkier, a lot of the research geared toward finding those therapies has been subject to drastic cuts.The NIH is the largest funder of biomedical research in the world and has supported major scientific discoveries, including those that benefit longevity research. But in late March, HHS announced a “dramatic restructuring” that would involve laying off 10,000 full-time employees. Since Trump took office, over a thousand NIH research grants have been ended and the administration has announced plans to slash funding for “indirect” research costs—a move that would cost individual research institutions millions of dollars. Research universities (notably Harvard) have been the target of policies to limit or revoke visas for international students, demands to change curricula, and threats to their funding and tax-exempt status.

The NIH also directly supports aging research. Notably, the Interventions Testing Program is a program run by the National Institutes of Aging (a branch of the NIH) to find drugs that make mice live longer. The idea is to understand the biology of aging and find candidates for human longevity drugs.

The ITP has tested around five to seven drugs a year for over 20 years, says Richard Miller, a professor of pathology at the University of Michigan, one of three institutes involved in the program. “We’ve published eight winners so far,” he adds.

The future of the ITP is uncertain, given recent actions of the Trump administration, he says. The cap on indirect costs alone would cost the University of Michigan around $181 million, the university’s interim vice president for research and innovation said in February. The proposals are subject to ongoing legal battles. But in the meantime, morale is low, says Miller. “In the worst-case scenario, all aging research [would be stopped],” he says.

The A4LI has also had to tailor its lobbying strategy given the current administration’s position on government-funded research. Alongside its efforts to change Montana state law to allow clinics to sell unproven treatments, the organization had been planning to push for an all-new NIH institute dedicated to aging and longevity research—an idea that O’Neill voiced support for last year. But current funding cuts under the new administration suggest that it’s “not the ideal political climate for this,” says Livingston.

Despite their enthusiasm for O’Neill’s confirmation, this has all left many members of the longevity community, particularly those with research backgrounds, concerned about what the cuts mean for the future of longevity science.

“Someone like [O’Neill], who’s an advocate for aging and longevity, would be fantastic to have at HHS,” says Matthew O’Connor, who spent over a decade at SRF and says he knows O’Neill “pretty well.” But he adds that “we shouldn’t be cutting the NIH.” Instead, he argues, the agency’s funding should be multiplied by 10.

“The solution to curing diseases isn’t to get rid of the organizations that are there to help us cure diseases,” adds O’Connor, who is currently co-CEO at Cyclarity Therapeutics, a company developing drugs for atherosclerosis and other age-related diseases.

But it’s still just too soon to confidently predict how, if at all, O’Neill will shape the government health agencies he will oversee.

“We don’t know exactly what he’s going to be doing as the deputy secretary of HHS,” says Public Citizen’s Steinbrook. “Like everybody who’s sworn into a government job, whether we disagree or agree with their views or actions … we still wish them well. And we hope that they do a good job.”

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There are very few people who are really opposed to improving health. The difficult parts are the questions of what to spend money on researching and the interplay with regulation.

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I was referring to his potential influence over regulatory requirements for approval of new drugs and other interventions.

I don’t like the combination of cutting science research across the board (including longevity) , and loosening regulations for new drugs. Time may tell how this will turn out, and it’s hopefully for the best.

True, we don’t know how it will play out. If he’s a longevity enthusiast, as the article says, he would be closer to a typical member of this forum than to a traditional health bureaucrat.

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Jim O’neil is definitely a longevity enthusiast; he attends many of the longevity meetings around the country and I’ve met him at one. He is Peter Thiel’s “go to guy” for all things longevity. We’ll see what sort of influence he has in the new administration…

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It’s the best thing that this administration has ever done. Jim O’Neill has always been at the right side of everything far ahead of time - be it the Thiel Fellowship, psychedelic advocacy, and “right to try” laws.

He’s even tpot-adjacent, and maybe the most open-minded person in a long time in government.

I know that many Thiel Fellows (eg Chris Olah) also have very high opinion of him.

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It’s complicated but we should start with optimism.

A hope? A chance.

[Bryan Johnson] met with Republican representatives from Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Texas as well as HHS Deputy Secretary Jim O’Neil and Michael Kratsios, the White House director of the Office of Science and Technology.

https://www.politico.com/newsletters/future-pulse/2025/06/27/bryan-johnson-wants-congress-to-sleep-00428129

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Was it on anyone’s bingo card that by 2025 an ex-CEO of SENS Research Foundation would be both the Deputy Secretary of the HHS, and the acting director of the CDC?

If that was the case, what would you expect in the coming years after that?

image

You shall know them by their fruits.

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I have a view about the participants in Trump 2.0 that many of them mean well. Some like RFK (and Trump himself) don’t really understand the issues, but others do.

I looked up the biblical quote

Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves. You will know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes from thornbushes or figs from thistles? Even so, every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a bad tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Therefore by their fruits you will know them.

There is, of course, a problem that proving that a particular intervention extends healthspan by say 10 years will take at least 10 years.

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