How is the safety of the participant protected?
The ethical and legal codes that govern medical practice
also apply to clinical trials. In addition, most clinical
research is federally regulated with built in safeguards
to protect the participants. The trial follows a carefully
controlled protocol, a study plan which details what
researchers will do in the study. As a clinical trial
progresses, researchers report the results of the trial
at scientific meetings, to medical journals, and to
various government agencies. Individual participants'
names will remain secret and will not be mentioned in
these reports (See Confidentiality Regarding
Trial Participants).
Every clinical trial in the U.S. must be approved and
monitored by an Institutional Review Board
(IRB) to make sure the risks are as low as possible
and are worth any potential benefits. An IRB is an independent
committee of physicians, statisticians, community advocates,
and others that ensures that a clinical trial is ethical
and the rights of study participants are protected.
All institutions that conduct or support biomedical
research involving people must, by federal regulation,
have an IRB that initially approves and periodically
reviews the research.
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