Interventional Clinical Study Participant
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A Interventional Clinical Study Participant is a human clinical study subject / human subject who participates in a clinical trial.
- AKA: Clinical Trial Subject.
- Context:
- They can range from being a Phase-I Clinical Trial Member to being a Phase-II Clinical Trial Member to being a Phase-III Clinical Trial Member to being a Phase-IV Clinical Trial Member.
- They can range from being a Clinical Trial Treatment Group Member to being a Clinical Trial Control Group Member (like a placebo participant).
- They can (typically) be identified by a Clinical Trial Recruitment Task.
- They can (typically) be screened by a Clinical Trial Screening Task.
- They can (typically) be associated with Clinical Trial Data (such as a case report form (CRF)) during a Clinical Trial Execution Task.
- They can (often) visit a Clinical Trial Site Location.
- They can use a Clinical Trial Participant App.
- They can range from being an Active Clinical Trial Patient to being a Discontinued Clinical Trial Patient to being a Exited Clinical Trial Patient.
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- Example(s):
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Treatment Group, Control Group, Medical Research, Decentralized Clinical Trial.