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    • Office of Research Development
    • Clinical & Translational Research
      Participating in Research
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      Biomedical Engineering Cancer Biology Cardiovascular & Metabolic Sciences Florida Research & Innovation Center Genomic Medicine Immunotherapy & Precision Immuno-Oncology
      Infection Biology Inflammation & Immunity Neurosciences Ophthalmic Research Quantitative Health Sciences Translational Hematology & Oncology Research
    • Centers & Programs
      Advanced Musculoskeletal Imaging Angiogenesis Center Cardiovascular Diagnostics & Prevention Computational Life Sciences Consortium for Pain Genitourinary Malignancies Research Genome Center
      Microbiome & Human Health Musculoskeletal Research Northern Ohio Alcohol Center Pathogen & Human Health Research Populations Health Research Quantitative Metabolic Research Therapeutics Discovery
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      3D Printing Bioimage Analysis BioRobotics & Mechanical Testing Cell Culture Cleveland Clinic BioRepository Computational Oncology Platform Computing Services Discovery Lab Electron Microscopy Electronics Engineering >
      Flow CytometryGenomic Medicine Institute BiorepositoryGenomics Glassware Histology Hybridoma Immunohistochemistry Immunomonitoring Lab Instrument Refurbishing & Repair Laboratory Diagnostic
      Lerner Research Institute BioRepository Light MicroscopyMechanical Prototyping Microbial Culturing & Engineering Microbial Sequencing & Analytics Resources Media Preparation Molecular Biotechnology Nitinol Polymer Proteomics & Metabolomics Therapeutics Discovery
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Participating in Research

Research Requires You

Researchers and doctors are essential to discovering innovative treatments. But they can't do it alone. Research requires you.

Our researchers and healthcare providers are committed to creating and delivering innovative healthcare solutions. It's why so many patients come to Cleveland Clinic for care.

To make sure our research and treatments benefit everyone, and not just specific groups of people, we depend on research participation.

That's where you come in.

Female doctor explaining information to senior patient.
  • Participating in Research
    Why Participate? What Does Participation Mean? How Do I Sign Up? FAQ

Participating in Research

Why participate?

The decision to sign up for a research study can be deeply personal. For as many people who volunteer, there are just as many reasons behind the decision.

..
Help Yourself

You help us learn how your body works & how we can keep it healthy

..
Help Others

Information from groups of people helps us develop better treatments for those with diseases

..
Solve Problems

Tackling the biggest challenges in healthcare requires all-hands-on-deck

..
Get Treatment

Some studies provide experimental treatments for people whose conditions don't respond to current medication

No matter the reason, your impact is the same! You are helping researchers and healthcare providers learn more about understanding and treating human health and disease.

Inclusion in research

Currently, about 80% of medical research participants represent only 12% of the global population. To create better solutions, we need participation from everyone. Why? Different groups of people face different medical problems. Many of these problems require unique solutions. Research participation needs to reflect the uniqueness of each of us.

Understanding how an individual – or how individual groups of people – respond to diseases and treatments provides valuable information on factors that influence health and disease. It is the first step in providing personalized healthcare tailored to your specific needs.

Inclusion in Action

A blood-pressure drug has the potential to protect Black patients from Alzheimer's disease

Read More

Inclusion in Action

A worrying link between sex and brain cancer survival – and what researchers are doing to fix it

Read More

What does participation mean?

When you sign up to be a participant in a research study, you are agreeing to provide scientists with the data necessary to answer important questions in the medical field.

The amount of time and involvement required varies. Participation is always voluntary, and you can choose to stop at any time.

By law, you must be told exactly what data will be collected and analyzed over the course of the study before you finish signing up. This process is called obtaining "informed consent." Study participation is anonymous, and any irrelevant information that might identify you will not be recorded or analyzed without informed consent.

Read more about laws that protect research participants here.

Ways you can participate
...
Survey Responses

Many studies don’t even require an in-person medical visit! Researchers often conduct surveys or analyze (anonymous) patient health records from registries to look for patterns.

Surveying in Action

Patient data helped generate an algorithm that predicts a baby's probability of developing severe forms of epilepsy

Read More
...
Sample Donation

The word "samples" in clinical research refers to materials that come from a research participant's body. The type of sample used in an experiment depends on the type of function being studied.

Sample donation works in two main ways

1. You can donate samples directly to researchers for a specific study

2. You can donate any leftover samples taken during routine health tests to one of our three BioRepositories
A biorepository serves as a "sample library" for our researchers.

  • Cleveland Clinic BioRepository
  • Lerner Research Institute BioRepository
  • Genomic Medicine Institute BioRepository

Samples in Action

Blood analyses revealed a potential genetic basis for why Hispanic, Latino individuals are more likely to develop gastric cancer

Read More

Biorepository in Action

Learn about how bloodwork from routine tests helped researchers make an important discovery about COVID-19

Read More
...
Clinical Trials

Clinical trials are the most involved types of research studies, but they also have the potential to provide the most immediate benefit. A clinical trial tests new medications and treatments before they are available to all patients.

Learn more about Cleveland Clinic's clinical trials.

Clinical Trials in Action

Learn about a clinical trial that successfully uses patient DNA to determine the optimal dose of radiation for personalized cancer treatment

Read More

How do I sign up?

  • Ask your healthcare provider
    Many specialist providers keep up with ongoing clinical trials and can help get you enrolled in one!

  • Sign up for researchmatch.org to join the participation registry
    This registry matches study recruiters with individuals who may qualify to participate. Recruiters can reach out to you on the website if they think youʼd be a good fit.

  • Go to clinicaltrials.gov to find clinical trials at the Cleveland Clinic
    All clinical trials must be reported to, and approved by, the necessary review boards and uploaded to this database.

  • Go to the Cleveland Clinic to find even more human studies
    This database includes human studies that arenʼt clinical trials.

FAQ

Genetic researchers analyze DNA to determine influences like your response to a drug, how likely you are to develop a disease and how a disease or environmental condition impacts your overall health. It is illegal for a researcher to use your DNA for anything outside the approved scope of the study. You will be informed of how your DNA will be used to study these factors before you agree to join a study. Your sample will be anonymous, and your DNA will not be linked to your identity.

No. Researchers will not share any information with anybody else, including your doctor or your insurance provider. Everything will be kept private.

We get asked this question a lot, but it actually doesnʼt happen nearly as much as people think. 99% of the time, it is impossible to "find" any information unrelated to the disease being studied. This is because research studies have strict protocols and rules about what information the researchers can and cannot look for when analyzing human samples.

If you want to stop, you can do so at any time!

Support Ground-Breaking Research

The future of health starts with your support. Donations supply researchers with the tools, space and staff they need to think big.

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