Digital Health Off The Record
Patient centricity is not a new topic in clinical trials, but it is one the industry still needs to keep coming back to. In this episode of Digital Health Off the Record, Farrell Healion and Edwin Cohen explore why incorporating patient voice earlier in study design can make a real difference to recruitment, retention and the overall patient experience. We discuss how patient input can help reduce unnecessary burden, improve protocol design, support more meaningful inclusion criteria and make trials work better around real life. We also look at where digital health technologies, DCT capabilities, patient feedback tools and patient engagement roles can help - and where simply adding more technology risks creating the opposite effect. As always, this is an honest conversation about what the industry is getting right, where we still fall short and how we can design better trials for patients, sites and sponsors. In this episode, we cover: * Why patient voice matters for recruitment, retention and study success 00:25 * How earlier patient input can improve protocol design and reduce burden 03:50 * Designing trials around real-world patient needs, diversity and access 05:46 * The role of DCTs, digital tools and patient feedback in improving the trial experience 12:55 * Why patient centricity still struggles to stick in practice 21:10 * Balancing standardisation with meaningful flexibility in global trials 25:26
10 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Digital Health Off The Record!