Many Phases of Study | Double-Blind Studies | Who Is Eligible for Clinical Trials? | Using the Internet to Recruit Participants | Considering a Clinical Trial

research lab study After thoroughly investigating drugs or other treatments using laboratory animals, researchers design studies, called "clinical trials." The purpose of these trials is to test the treatments' safety and effectiveness in people. To receive approval from the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for a new drug, manufacturers must prove that the agent works in humans and is not dangerous. They do this by submitting results from a series of clinical trials.

Using the Internet to Recruit Participants

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) clinical trials website is a searchable database that aims to bring together scientists and potential trial participants. Patients, families, or physicians can easily hunt through thousands of trials to find ongoing or completed research related to a specific condition. You can browse through a list of diseases or trial locations, or let the site narrow it down through a focused search.

"The goal is to have people come to one site," says Alexa T. McCray, PhD, director of biomedical communications for the National Library of Medicine. "People were having trouble finding the information they needed."