HEALTH & SCIENCE
NIH clinical trial initiative: Agency reaches out to primary careThe research needs of primary care physicians can be met through networks where questions spring from shared experience.By Susan J. Landers, AMNews staff. May 24/31, 2004. Washington -- Community-based physicians do not often look to the vast National Institutes of Health for answers to questions that haunt them daily, whether they involve the care of diabetic patients or the expeditious handling of lab results. But NIH is considering reaching out to these doctors and their patients as resources for some of its many clinical trials. "There is a segment of the physician and patient community that is rarely involved in clinical research activities," noted Duane Alexander, MD, director of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. As a first step, a feasibility study will be conducted that will include assessing physician interest in becoming a part of a new network, he said. Many primary care physicians, however, as well as those in other specialties, have not been waiting for an invitation from NIH but have been enrolling their patients in clinical trials for years. They belong to one of the more than 100 such networks that explore questions that strike close to home. These networks, which could serve as a model for the NIH initiative, have examined such varied issues as the management of laboratory test results in family practices and the effect of a patient's insurance status on treatment decisions. Several networks are now determining the best ways to motivate patients to adopt healthier lifestyles. The NIH proposal to tap community physicians as well as dentists and nurse practitioners and their patients as a resource was put forward as part of a "roadmap" for future NIH research by NIH Director Elias Zerhouni, MD. [...]Full text of AMNews content is available to AMA members and paid subscribers.
Copyright 2004 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
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