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Design and Interpretation of Clinical Trials
Coursera
Course
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Design and Interpretation of Clinical Trials

Johns Hopkins University

Learn foundational principles for designing randomized clinical trials and techniques for analyzing and interpreting their results.

Unknown6 weeksEnglish158,076 enrolled

About this Course

Clinical trials are experiments designed to evaluate new interventions to prevent or treat disease in humans. The interventions evaluated can be drugs, devices (e.g., hearing aid), surgeries, behavioral interventions (e.g., smoking cessation program), community health programs (e.g. cancer screening programs) or health delivery systems (e.g., special care units for hospital admissions). We consider clinical trials experiments because the investigators rather than the patients or their doctors select the treatment the patients receive. Results from randomized clinical trials are usually considered the highest level of evidence for determining whether a treatment is effective because trials incorporates features to ensure that evaluation of the benefits and risks of treatments are objective and unbiased. The FDA requires that drugs or biologics (e.g., vaccines) are shown to be effective in clinical trials before they can be sold in the US. The course will explain the basic principles for design of randomized clinical trials and how they should be reported. In the first part of the course, students will be introduced to terminology used in clinical trials and the several common designs used for clinical trials, such as parallel and cross-over designs. We will also explain some of the mechanics of clinical trials, like randomization and blinding of treatment. In the second half of the course, we will explain how clinical trials are analyzed and interpreted. Finally, we will review the essential ethical consideration involved in conducting experiments on people

What You'll Learn

  • Explain basic principles of randomized clinical trial design
  • Describe proper reporting of clinical trials
  • Understand randomization and blinding mechanisms
  • Analyze and interpret clinical trial results

Prerequisites

  • Basic computer and internet skills
  • Ability to follow English instructions and complete exercises

Instructors

J

Janet Holbrook, PhD, MPH

Associate Professor, Epidemiology

L

Lea T. Drye, PhD

Assistant Scientist, Epidemiology

Topics

Research
Health
Statistical Analysis
Clinical Trials
Research Design
Informed Consent
Clinical Research
Drug Development
Clinical Research Ethics
Scientific Methods

Course Info

PlatformCoursera
LevelUnknown
PacingUnknown
PriceFree

Skills

البحث العلمي
الصحة
التحليل الإحصائي
التجارب السريرية
تصميم البحث
الموافقة المستنيرة
البحث الإكلينيكي
تطوير الأدوية
Clinical Research Ethics
Scientific Methods

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