It's having an enormous impact. We have so little of it in the first place. Let's be clear: Our funding levels have been low and they are declining in comparison to the G7 and G20; our health research funding is going in the opposite direction to that in many other countries. We have that against us.
We then also have this extreme lack of attention being paid to women's health factors, which were the subject of 6% of funding in 8,000 federally funded grants over 11 years. That's a pretty small piece of the pie; we need a larger pie in general.
I'll just say that a lot of our costs for research are funding people. The costs for Ph.D. students, research assistants and labs are all going up, so we can do less and less research with the money we have.