How can I take control of my health?
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Click on this video to hear a real story about safety and ethics in clinical trials.
Most people who take part in clinical trials are white or Caucasian. Non-white minorities make up less than 10% of all clinical trial participants. This is a problem because some minority groups get certain diseases more often. For example, African American men are twice as likely as white men to die from prostate cancer. However, African American men only make up 4% of men in prostate cancer clinical trials. Because of this, treatments for prostate cancer may not work as well for African American men.
Click on this video to hear how diversity is important to clinical trials.
A person’s response to diseases and medications can depend on many things. Some factors include a person’s genes, ethnicity, sex, and lifestyle. Different groups can process medications differently. Also, medications that work for one group may not work for another. It is important to have diverse groups of people taking part in clinical trials so that the trials can:
If diverse groups of people take part in clinical trials, medications and treatments should work for more people.
Click on this video to hear a real story about safety and ethics in clinical trials.
Groups of people that are underrepresented in clinical trials include people who are:
Who takes part in a study depends on the type of study. People who are not underrepresented in one type of study may be underrepresented in another. For example, women make up around half of all clinical trial participants. Yet women only make up around one third of people in clinical trials focused on the heart. This is a problem because heart diseases are the leading cause of death among both men and women.
Read: Women Are Still Underrepresented in Clinical Trials for Cardiovascular Disease Drugs
Click on this video to hear a real story about safety and ethics in clinical trials.
You will not be treated differently because of your ethnicity, sex, or age. You will be given the same rights as another other research participants. Your rights are to:
Click on a link below to learn about current demographics and the need for a diverse participation pool in clinical trials
Click to learn more about how increased diversity may impact the results of clinical trials
Click on a link below to see resources at Chicago Public Library:
Find a trial at Northwestern University here
Call a clinical trials recruitment nurse at Northwestern: (312)-695-1102
Find trials throughout Chicago and the US here
Connect to services and programs around Chicago
CDPH’s Healthy Chicago 2.0 initiative
Print out this list of questions to ask about clinical trials.