AI Article Synopsis

  • The COVID-19 pandemic increased the need for clinical trial support from medical students, highlighting the importance of adhering to Good Clinical Practice (GCP) despite challenges in training due to social-distancing regulations.
  • An interdisciplinary expert panel from Germany and the Netherlands created a comprehensive "Students' guide to documentation in clinical trials" to set a common quality standard for student involvement.
  • The guide includes roles in clinical trials, GCP principles, documentation practices, a trilingual medical dictionary, and further reading recommendations, serving as a self-training resource rather than a replacement for practical training courses.

Article Abstract

Purpose: In the wake of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, support in clinical trials by students of human medicine and related disciplines has become of even greater importance than in pre-pandemic times. Documentation in clinical trials adheres to the principles of Good Clinical Practice (GCP), and healthcare professionals involved in the conduct of clinical trials-including students-are obliged to perform documentation in accordance with GCP principles. Unprecedented challenges have arisen with regard to the appropriate training of students as training courses in presence had largely to be suspended due to social-distancing regulations during the heyday of the COVID-19 pandemic. Therefore, novel training formats and self-study training materials for students working in clinical trials are urgently warranted.

Methods: To overcome this shortcoming and to define a common quality standard, an interdisciplinary, multiprofessional (physicians, study nurses, medical students), and binational (Germany, The Netherlands) expert panel convened and devised the Students' guide to documentation in clinical trials.

Results: Following a brief description of the different roles in clinical trials (e.g., sponsor, (principal) investigator, monitor) and an introduction into the principles of GCP, the documentation of adverse events, concomitant medication, medical history, and quality control are comprehensively discussed. The Guide concludes with a trilingual medical dictionary (English, German, Dutch) and with recommendations of pertinent literature for further reading.

Conclusion: Serving both as textbook for self-training and as (quick-) reference work for the daily routine, the Guide has specifically been designed to complement, but not to replace practical training courses for students. While primarily addressed at students of human medicine and related disciplines, the Guide can also be of high relevance and utility to other healthcare professionals involved in the conduct of clinical trials.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9524727PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00228-022-03394-zDOI Listing

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