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Review

Public Confidence and Involvement in Clinical Research: Symposium Summary Clinical Research Roundtable September 2000

Washington (DC): National Academies Press (US); 2001.
Free Books & Documents
Review

Public Confidence and Involvement in Clinical Research: Symposium Summary Clinical Research Roundtable September 2000

Institute of Medicine (US) Board on Health Sciences Policy.
Free Books & Documents

Excerpt

The Clinical Research Roundtable (CRR) of the National Academies held its second meeting in September 2000 in Washington, DC. An information-gathering symposium on Public Confidence and Involvement in Clinical Research was open to the public. It included speakers who have collected data on the public's perception of clinical research; speakers who are experienced researchers and have collected information on the barriers and incentives that influence recruitment and retention of research participants; speakers who represent different patient groups; and speakers who have experience integrating clinical research into a community-based clinical practice. Repeated themes from the meeting suggest that the American public is very supportive of clinical research, that collaborative models where researchers and participants work together tend to be more successful, and that research participants needs must be explicitly address in order to improve recruitment and retention.

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Grants and funding

Support for this project was provided by the AMA, AAMC, AHRQ, VA, CDC, FDA, NIH, RWJ, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Johnson & Johnson, Burroughs Wellcome Fund, Merck and Co., Pfizer, Inc., and the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. The views presented in this report are those of the Institute of Medicine Clinical Research Roundtable and are not necessarily those of the funding agencies.

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