Table of Contents
Is clinical trial data public?
Through ClinicalTrials.gov, key facts about registered trials, including study design, administrative information, and results summaries (for completed trials), are now readily available to researchers, medical professionals, potential trial participants, and the public at large.
How do you promote clinical trials?
Clinical trial advertising guidelines
- Ad copy for digital channels, including Facebook, Twitter, paid search platforms, and banners.
- Website text for a landing page about your clinical trial.
- A prescreener for your clinical trial.
- Scripts for team members who speak to patients about your trial.
What are the benefits of pooling and sharing information?
Benefits of pooling individual subject data include enhanced statistical power, the ability to compare outcomes and validate models across sites or settings, and opportunities to develop new measures.
How does clinical trial recruitment work?
Clinical trial patient recruitment companies use a range of methods, from digital advertising to community partnerships, to find the right patients for your trial. Depending on your trial’s needs, you may want to choose a company with a particular specialty in a therapeutic area or patient population.
What are some benefits of sharing online?
For example, sharing can help everyone:
- get to know our neighbors and make neighborhoods safer.
- make friends.
- find resources and referrals more easily.
- find new ways to relate to friends, relatives, coworkers, and neighbors.
- lighten our load of responsibilities.
- create more free time.
What is the purpose of sharing your research?
Data sharing allows researchers to build upon the work of others rather than repeat already existing research. Sharing data also enables researchers to perform meta-analyses on the current research topic.
Under HIPAA, your health care provider may share your information face-to-face, over the phone, or in writing. A health care provider or health plan may share relevant information if: You give your provider or plan permission to share the information. You are present and do not object to sharing the information.