Bioinformatics teams lack accessible expertise for complex computational biology analysis and data interpretation
Government agencies and research institutions struggle to find qualified bioinformaticians and computational biologists to handle large-scale genomic data analysis, requiring expensive long-term consulting engagements ($62M+ contracts) because internal teams lack the specialized skills. Current solutions force organizations into multi-year vendor lock-in contracts or face project delays when they need flexible, on-demand expertise for short-term consultations and collaborative analysis.
Validation Scores
Overall Score: 24.2%
Payment Evidence (3)
Payment Type Course
Payment intent for course: training
From: Department of Health and Human Services funding: BIOINFORMATICS AND COMPUTATIONAL BIOSCIEN
Payment Type Coaching
Payment intent for coaching: consultation
From: Department of Health and Human Services funding: BIOINFORMATICS AND COMPUTATIONAL BIOSCIEN
Payment Type Service
Payment intent for service: service, agency
From: Department of Health and Human Services funding: BIOINFORMATICS AND COMPUTATIONAL BIOSCIEN
Source Signals (2)
A government agency (Department of Health and Human Services) is paying $62,259,192.93 to GUIDEHOUSE DIGITAL LLC for: BIOINFORMATICS AND COMPUTATIONAL BIOSCIENCES SUPPORT SERVICES - BIOINFORMATICS AND COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY ANALYSIS SERVICES INCLUDING SHORT-TERM CONSULTATIONS AS WELL AS HANDS-ON COLL...
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Problem Details
- Category
- science
- Pain Keywords
- bioinformatics expertise shortage, computational biology analysis bottleneck, expensive consulting contracts, data analysis training gap, genomic data interpretation
- Signals Collected
- 2
- Created
- 2026-06-25 10:10