Completing a feasibility questionnaire for a clinical trial is a critical process on the path to site selection. Take the proper steps to turn the feasibility questionnaire into selection for a study.
Crisis in Clinical Trial Recruitment: More Short-Term Thinking is NOT the Solution
Recruitment in clinical trials is in crisis. Most trials don't meet their recruitment targets on time. One reason for this is the industry's short term approach to recruitment. Recruitment is only contemplated one study at a time when it should be approached as a long term plan.
Negotiating the Negotiation
The negotiation of a clinical trial budget should commence during the feasibility questionnaire review and continue through pre-study visits using planned communications.
Recruitment Timelines Not Met
Clinical trial recruitment timelines become impossible to meet when studies don't start on time.
Revolving CRAs
There's a cost to the clinical trial site each time the CRA changes. With the current state of sponsors and CROs, CRA changes seem to happen with increasing frequency. Sponsors and CROs need to work to decrease the impact CRA changes have on a site (and compensate the site for the additional work).
A Physician’s guide to getting started in clinical research
Getting involved in clinical research can be challenging. Many new investigators struggle for years to get a clinical research business off the ground. Once they participate in their first study, it may not be what they expected, and they abandon clinical research altogether. This article seeks to inform potential investigators and sites and provide guidance on next steps.
What’s the site cost of sponsor required portals?
There is a cost to sites for the portals that sponsors select for a clinical trial. That cost to the site can be in the thousands before a study starts.
Highly anticipated FDA draft guidance on Decentralized Clinical Trials has been released
The FDA finally released its draft guidance on Decentralized Clinical Trials (DCTs). Is it everything we've been waiting for?
The 4 “I”s of Investigator Motivation – Irritations
The last post in this series focused on the Impediments in clinical research that affect Investigator Motivation and ultimately, Momentum in a clinical trial. Those impediments obviously can be irritants, but there are many other things that result in site irritation. Don’t underestimate the effect that irritations can have on a clinical study and the reaction that can result from sites. When you’re out for a walk and a single raindrop falls, you might not think too much of it or change your path. If the volume picks up and becomes a deluge, you’re going to react (at least I hope you do). Investigator Motivation decreases in a clinical trial long before the irritations become a storm.
The 4 “I”s of Investigator Motivation – Impediments
In the introduction to this series about Investigator Motivation, the connection was drawn between Motivation and Momentum. It’s a cyclical effect in clinical trials where one can influence the other both in negative and positive ways. When both Motivation and Momentum are low, we find sites silently quitting the study. What brings them to this point? One piece of the puzzle is to identify and eliminate impediments that prevent the study from functioning optimally.
