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Reducing the Burden of Clinical Trials

When research works for your life. The burden reduction is becoming a key part of patient-centered research. It means rethinking how studies are run — with real flexibility, support, and respect for what it takes to show up.

In the past, clinical trials often meant frequent in-person visits, long travel times, and rigid appointment schedules. That may work in theory — but it doesn’t work for real people with jobs, families, and other responsibilities.

Burden reduction means designing trials that respect your time.

 

That includes:

  • Reasonable visit schedules
  • Fewer in-person visits when safe
  • Shorter appointments
  • Flexibility for nights or weekends

Because showing up for research shouldn’t mean missing work or scrambling for childcare.

One of the biggest advances in burden reduction is decentralized trial design — using technology and local support so you don’t have to keep traveling to a research site.

Depending on the study, this could include:

  • Tele-visits with your research team
  • Home health services for labs or check-ins
  • eConsent tools so you can review and sign documents from home
  • Remote monitoring using secure apps or wearables

These tools make research more accessible, especially for patients who live far from major hospitals or who face mobility or transportation challenges.

Even with a well-designed study, life happens. That’s why more research teams are now offering practical support to help you participate without added stress.

This may include:

  • Travel assistance or mileage reimbursement
  • Childcare stipends if you need coverage to attend visits
  • Meal or lodging support for longer appointments
  • Help with scheduling to avoid conflicts with work or school

It’s not about pampering — it’s about leveling the playing field so more people can participate, not just those with flexible lives or extra resources.

Burden reduction isn’t just good for patients — it’s smart science. When studies are easier to join and stick with, more people participate. And when participants are less stressed or overextended, data quality improves.

 

That leads to:

  • Faster recruitment
  • More diverse participants
  • Better adherence
  • More meaningful results

In other words, less burden = better research — for everyone.

Clinical research should be built around the realities of patient life — not the other way around. You shouldn’t have to give up time with your family, take unpaid days off work, or drive hours just to contribute to science.

Burden reduction says: Let’s meet patients where they are.
Let’s make it easier to say yes — and easier to keep saying yes.