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Medical Trials

Medical/Clinical trials are research studies designed to test how well new drugs and medical approaches work on people. The research medical teams try to find new ways to prevent, screen for or treat a disease or illness. In a clinical drug trial, researchers first test the safety and efficiency of newly developed pharmaceuticals. Clinical trials for a new medicine must pass Phases I, II, and III before the drugs can be approved. Since each phase requires human test subjects, and because new drugs can be very profitable, these studies generally pay volunteers well for their participation. Clinical trials, unless volunteer, are almost always paid. There is the potential to earn extra money through paid clinical study trials simply by being an exceptional candidate, being honest about your medical history and fully committing to the trial. The longer the medical trial takes or demands of you, the higher the payout. Many believe that clinical trials for pay are great for those who need a little extra cash and have some spare time to commit. Clinical trials for pay compensate their participants for taking part in the research so you'll need to be willing to answer questions and dedicate a day or two. Beyond that, it is said that taking part in clinical trials for pay can earn a nice extra income for those who need it.

 

 

Why Should I Participate in a Clinical Trial?

 

Clinical trials are part of clinical research and at the heart of all medical advances. Clinical trials look at new ways to prevent, detect, or treat disease.

 

Treatments might be new drugs or new combinations of drugs, new surgical procedures or devices, or new ways to use existing treatments.

 

The goal of clinical trials is to determine if a new test or treatment works and is safe. Clinical trials can also look at other aspects of care, such as improving the quality of life for people with chronic illnesses.

 

People participate in clinical trials for a variety of reasons. Healthy volunteers say they participate to help others and to contribute to moving science forward. Participants with an illness or disease also participate to help others, but also to possibly receive the newest treatment and to have the additional care and attention from the clinical trial staff.

 

Clinical trials offer hope for many people and an opportunity to help researchers find better treatments for others in the future.

 

 

Some clinical trials are prospective biomedical or behavioral research studies on human subjects that are designed to answer specific questions about biomedical or behavioral interventions (novel vaccines, drugs, treatments, functional foods, dietary supplements, devices or new ways of using known interventions), generating safety and efficacy data. They are conducted only after satisfactory information has been gathered that satisfies health authority/ethics committee approval in the country where approval of the therapy is sought. Depending on product type and development stage, investigators initially enroll volunteers and/or patients into small pilot studies, and subsequently conduct progressively larger scale comparative studies. As positive safety and efficacy data are gathered, the number of patients typically increases. Clinical trials can vary in size, and can involve a single research entity in one country or multiple entities in multiple countries.  A full series of trials may cost hundreds of millions of dollars. The burden of paying is usually borne by the sponsor, which may be a governmental organization or a pharmaceutical, biotechnology or medical device company. When the required support exceeds the sponsor's capacity, the trial may be managed by an outsourced partner, such as a contract research organization or an academic clinical trials unit.

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