STAT June 7, 2024
For many Americans, health care means going to a local primary care office. But the vast majority of clinical research is conducted inside the walls of large, specialized academic health centers. Millions of patients are left out of those studies, which often fail to capture the population in all its diversity.
Now, for the first time, the National Institutes of Health is investing in the creation of a national primary care research network to try to address this issue. Its $30 million pilot program, called Communities Advancing Research Equity for Health and announced on Thursday, will fund and support a small number of primary care sites as they participate in a range of clinical trials.
“This is an incredibly exciting...