The Institut national de la santé et de la recherche médicale (Inserm, French pronunciation: [insɛʁm]) is the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research.

Institut national de la santé et de la recherche médicale
AbbreviationInserm
Formation1964
TypeGovernmental organization
Location
  • Paris
Region served
France
Official language
French
Director
Claire Giry (interim)
Staff
6,500
Websiteinserm.fr/en

History and organisation

Inserm was created in 1964 as a successor to the French National Institute of Health.[citation needed]

Inserm is the only public research institution solely focused on human health and medical research in France.[1] It is a public institution with a scientific and technical vocation under the dual auspices of the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Research.[citation needed] Similarly to the US National Institutes of Health, Inserm conducts fundamental and translational research projects through 339 research units, run by around 13,000 scientists, including 5,100 permanent research staff members and 5,100 staff members co-affiliated with university hospitals and medicine faculties. Inserm's laboratories and research units are located all over France, mainly in the largest cities. Eighty percent of Inserm research units are embedded in research hospitals of French universities.[citation needed]

In 1997, Inserm founded Orphanet, a rare disease database.[2]

Inserm's CEO is chosen by decree upon a proposal of the Ministers of Health and Research, advised by a review committee.[3] The CEO since January 2019 is Gilles Bloch, a doctor and researcher specializing in medical imaging.[4]

Ranking

According to the 2019 Scimago Institutions Ranking, Inserm is the second-best research institution in the health sector (behind the NIH) and twenty-second best across all sectors.[5]

Awards

Two Inserm research scientists have been awarded by the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. In 1980, the French immunologist Jean Dausset received the Nobel prize (along with Baruj Benacerraf and George Davis Snell), for his work on the discovery and characterisation of the genes making the major histocompatibility complex. In 2008, the French virologist Françoise Barré-Sinoussi was awarded, together with her former mentor Luc Montagnier, for the identification of the human immunodeficiency virus.

Grand prix de l'Inserm

Each year, Inserm awards three researchers in three major distinct categories. The Grand prix de l'Inserm recognizes major advancements in biology for an active researcher of the institution, the Grand prix d'honneur recognizes a French public institution's researcher whose contributions have had a major impact in science, and the Prix étranger (Foreign Prize) awards a foreign researcher for their particular contributions to biomedical research. In addition the Inserm has internal awards for engineers and young researchers.

Awardees

YearGrand prixPrix d'honneurPrix international
2023Nadine Cerf-Bensussan
2022Olivier Delattre
2021Marion Leboyer
2020Dominique CostagliolaAnthony Fauci
2019Eric GilsonJean-François DelfraissyMichel Sadelain
2018Alain TedguiAntoine TrillerElisabetta Dejana
2017[6]Edith HeardClaude-Agnès Reynaud and Jean-Claude WeillMarie-Paule Kieny
2016[7]Jean-Laurent CasanovaCatherine BarthélémyLinda Fried
2015[8]Pier-Vincenzo PiazzaÉtienne-Émile BaulieuPeter Piot
2014[9]Anne Dejean-AssématWilliam VainchenkerLeszek Borysiewicz
2013[10]Stanislas DehaeneDaniel LouvardOgobara Doumbo
2012[11]Philippe SansonettiJean-Paul SoulillouIngrid Grummt
2011[12]Alain ProchiantzEthel MoustacchiSusan Gasser
2010[13]Didier RaoultEliane GluckmanDenis Duboule
2009[14]Yehezkel Ben-AriNicole Le DouarinNora Volkow
2008[15]Alain FischerAlim-Louis BenabidTomas Lindahl
2007Christine PetitPierre DucimetièreMina Bissel
2006Pierre CorvolKetty SchwartzZhu Chen
2005Bernard Malissen at the CIMLJacques GlowinskiDavid P. Lane
2004Jean-Marc EglyPierre ChambonHarvey Alter
2003Miroslav Radman
2002Monique Capron
2001Yves Agid
2000Arnold Munnich

Notes and references