Where would we be
without health research and all the pioneering treatments designed to
save and extend lives? Or without the everyday people who lend their
time, personal experiences and bodies to science, helping make these
breakthroughs possible? Thanks to a new website, there’s now a place
where researchers and participants can come together.Family
Health Diary is pleased to support www.getparticipants.com –
a new
online portal that puts willing participants in touch with local
researchers.
Just by registering at the website, New Zealanders
across the country can be linked to relevant research projects and
opportunities to get involved.
Health research is what paves the way
to new treatments and cures; it helps identify disease risk factors and
prevent illnesses from occurring in the first place. By taking part in
research you help contribute to that process, and in most cases only
low-level participation is required.
Joining a study can involve
as little as completing a 5-minute questionnaire, enrolling in a new
treatment group or programme, or simply writing down how things are
making you feel.
KEEPING SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH ALIVEThe website,
developed by MSc graduate Jamie Mannion, could be just the tonic for New
Zealand researchers who often struggle to recruit enough participants
for their studies, mainly because the ideal candidates don’t realise
they’re happening.
New Zealand has some of the world’s best
scientists, who are right now testing world-leading therapies in
Parkinson’s disease, cancer, brain injury recovery and more, yet
approximately 75% of studies don’t meet recruitment targets and are
subsequently abandoned or fail to produce meaningful results.
The
situation amounts to a hand-brake on research, adding hugely to costs
and delays in studying innovative therapies and treatments, says Jamie,
who – after struggling to find participants for his own research thesis –
decided to do something about it.
Now, thanks to
getparticipants.com, all the researchers needing participants for
studies and all the Kiwis keen to fight for better treatments and cures,
can effectively come together.
WHAT DO RESEARCH STUDIES INVOLVE?Few
research studies involve clinical trials or the testing of medication –
in fact such trials make up only a tiny portion of the 4000 studies
requiring volunteers each year.
The studies listed on
getparticipants.com include a diverse range of general health and
population studies that apply to most of us. Ranging from headaches and
sleeplessness through to parenting and sports research, most studies
involve little more than some clinic visits and keeping track of your
own health symptoms.
For anyone directly or indirectly affected by a
medical, physical or physiological condition, taking part in research
can be a great way to learn about your condition or to try something
that may benefit you directly, or others in a similar situation.*
*All health studies operate under approval
from ethical committees to ensure that participants are treated safely
and ethically. Scientists conducting health research are experts in
their fields, and where necessary, will conduct health screening
measures before enrolling volunteers to ensure the participants are
suitable for the study. BACK PAIN STUDY – COULD YOU TAKE PART?Eight out of 10 of us will experience back pain at some time in
our lives. In fact, for half of us who get back pain, it will be present
in some form over the next four years, but for 5% of us, it stays. Why?
Despite huge advances in rehabilitation and pain
science, it is still largely unknown why the pain goes away for some and
stays with others. A study into back pain currently
being conducted by the University of Otago aims to identify the causes
and help prevent back pain from becoming chronic. If you’re aged between
18 and 65 and are experiencing an acute bout of back pain, you might
want to take part. Visit www.backpain.getparticipants.com
for more.
Top of page
Print this page