CTN Webinar:Informed Consent for Human Participant Research.


 

CTN Webinar:Informed Consent for Human Participant Research. – This one-hour webinar, produced by the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN) Clinical Coordinating Center for CTN members and the public, is intended to assist CTN affiliated research staff understand the principles that govern human subject research and the importance of informed consent in research trials. The target audience includes CTN members and members of the public interested in learning more about the process, principles, and requirements involved in working with human subjects in clinical trials. Presented by Lynn Kunkel, MS, CCRP (Oregon Health & Science University, WS Node) and Jennifer Sharpe Potter, PhD (University of Texas, TX Node). For more resources related to this webinar, as well as other webinars in this series, visit: ctndisseminationlibrary.org

 

Prof maps genome & masters cool: AMA on Reddit, MIT Gangnam video, MOOC

Filed under: principles of drug addiction treatment

There will be tremendous opportunities for creativity (and some possibilities for abuse.) Do you think the future of cancer therapies are going to be … If you just treat with one drug, there's a good chance that a fraction of the cancer cells will be …
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Fla. CFO Atwater announces 2013 priorities, outlines key reforms

Filed under: principles of drug addiction treatment

Atwater says he will continue to follow the principles that have marked his first two years in office, and will advocate for reforms that increase government transparency and accountability, protect Florida's consumers, fight fraud, get government off …
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Featured Story Free Speech in the Era of Its Technological Amplification

Filed under: principles of drug addiction treatment

On the other hand, socialism enjoyed only a fleeting historical success in a few countries, because it contradicted the liberal principles you championed. No one solved what in your Autobiography you called “the social problem of the future”: …. (For …
Read more on MIT Technology Review