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Bio-IT World July 2005 David Fishbach |
Does EDC Herald the End of CTMS? Clinical trial managements systems (CTMSs) and Electronic data capture systems (EDCs) are compared with respect to their history, advantages and disadvantages. Studies suggest both have enough advantages to survive in some form of integrated solution. |
Bio-IT World May 9, 2003 Mark D. Uehling |
Data Rapture? Electronic capture of data: Some say it unclogs the medieval clinical trials process. Others remain skeptical of software and put their trust in paper. |
CIO February 15, 2006 Christopher Lindquist |
Ajax Arrives for the Enterprise Ajax is quickly gaining acceptance worldwide as developers look to design Web interfaces that hook users with their speed and ease of use. |
Bio-IT World March 17, 2004 Paul Bleicher |
Winning at EDC Implementation Adoption may be lagging at the enterprise level, but there's a stalwart group of biopharmas making EDC happen. Here's how they're doing it |
Bio-IT World March 10, 2003 Kenneth Getz |
E-Clinical Technology Overview Clinical trial researchers want to leverage the benefits of IT -- and now they can for every core process. But they also have to get past the barriers to adoption. |
Bio-IT World March 17, 2004 |
Speeding EDC Adoption Implementation by clinical sites is lumbering along at an unimpressive rate. Here's what must be done to speed things up |
Bio-IT World February 2006 Chris Connor |
Has EDC Jumped the Shark? As data management teams begin to deploy electronic data capture in their clinical trials, "cool" gives way to the cool reality that IT investments have to produce real results. |
Bio-IT World January 13, 2003 Mark D. Uehling |
Powerhouse CRO (Slowly) Goes Electronic Unhappy customers at Quintiles -- the world's largest CRO (contract research organization) -- are rare. It kept plugging away at the startup process, redesigning it from scratch. Now starting electronic trials takes no longer than paper ones. |
Pharmaceutical Executive November 1, 2006 |
Unraveling the eSource Industry-wide standards for electronic patient data have long felt like buried treasure. Companies today are getting closer - by way of a tangled map. |
Pharmaceutical Executive July 1, 2006 Jeannette Park |
Roundtable: Are We There Yet? How About Now? Now? Can Electronic Data Capture become the industry standard for clinical trials? In this roundtable discussion, six early adopters reveal where they struggled, and what you need to know to implement this new technology. |
Wired June 2006 Paul Boutin |
Quick 'n' Clean Jesse James Garrett Ajax (Asynchronous Javascript and XML) idea is cutting edge for making your website more fluid. |
Bio-IT World March 10, 2003 Spink & Blumenstiel |
Getting IT Right Applying information technology to trials can boost productivity. Here's a strategic framework for going e-clinical. |
Bio-IT World August 18, 2004 Mark D. Uehling |
Master of the EDC Universe An interview with Sylva Collins, global head of advanced clinical systems at Novartis, who in the case of electronic data capture (EDC), proved to the pharmaceutical industry that technology could be transformative in clinical trials. |
PC Magazine November 30, 2005 John Clyman |
Better Web-App Interfaces with AJAX A new approach to building Web applications promises a richer experience for users. |
Bio-IT World June 2006 Mark D. Uehling |
Afferenz on EDC, Images, and Data Integration There are people who think the outsourcing of IT to India will not affect the life sciences. But companies like Afferenz raises concerns about U.S. companies lagging behind Indian companies on laying the foundation for clinical trials. |
CRM February 1, 2006 Marshall Lager |
Cleaner Page Loads with AJAX What can companies do when they need granularity in their dashboards? The answer is, clean them up with AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML). |
InternetNews December 27, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Startups Board the AJAX Bandwagon New companies are touting AJAX, thanks to forays from Microsoft and Google. |
Bio-IT World March 17, 2004 |
Strategic Insights Clinical Trials Major drug developers have put electronic data capture to the test and found benefits ranging from instant data access to fewer truckloads of paper. Yet many clinical sites are slow to accept the technology. |
Bio-IT World July 2005 Mark D. Uehling |
'E-source' Is Coming, Experts Say The odd marriages of the ancient and modern in clinical technologies were in evidence at the E-Clinical Trials & Research conference program. There was evidence of the adoption of advanced and robust commercial software -- even toward clinical trials that do not use paper, though most do. |
Bio-IT World August 13, 2002 Mark D. Uehling |
Clinical Trial Data Management: Tortured by Paper Reams of paper stuffed into boxes and shipped to the FDA by the truckload is hardly the best approach to drug approval. But what's the right way? |
Bio-IT World Dec 2006/Jan 2007 John Mestler |
e-Harmony: EDC and e-Health Records Bringing bio-pharmaceutical requirements to the table with government eHealth designers in the US, EU, and around the world is the beginning of the necessary fusion of electronic health records and electronic data capture. |
InternetNews October 5, 2006 Andy Patrizio |
After The Buzz, Ajax Goes To Work Ajax is an example of the whole being greater than the sum of its parts. And the big developers have all caught the Ajax religion. |
ONLINE Nov./Dec. 2006 Jason A. Clark |
AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML): This Isn't the Web I'm Used To Ajax changes how users are able to interact with online content by allowing Web page data updates without the usual routine of clicking from Web page to Web page. What's in it for Libraries? |
Bio-IT World May 19, 2004 Mark Uehling |
Patients Without Borders As biotech companies search for patients abroad, technology clearly matters--but not every clinical trial on the planet is ready for electronic data capture. |
Bio-IT World November 2006 Mark D. Uehling |
Putting EDC on the Fast Track There's no escaping the imposing numbers of choices in launching a clinical trial using electronic data capture. Is there a better way? Clinical trial consultant Fast Track Systems says it has one. |
InternetNews August 12, 2005 Jim Wagner |
The Return of AJAX? The AJAX style incorporates a number of web standards, including XHTML, XML, XSLT, and DOM. The technique has been used in Google Maps, Amazon's A9 search engine, and Microsoft Outlook Web Access. |
Bio-IT World February 2007 Beth Harper |
Meshing EDC with CTMS Many unsolved problems in conducting clinical trials cause delays, wasted resources, team frustration, and even safety issues. Thus, the industry is turning more of its attention away from Electronic Data Capture to Clinical Trial Management Systems. |
Bio-IT World Dec 2005/Jan 2006 Mark D. Uehling |
Convergence of EHR and EDC The hypothesized convergence of applications and databases for drug development, clinical trials, hospitals, and physicians is both closer and more distant. |
Bio-IT World August 2005 Ellen H. Julian |
Tech Expertise Singles Out Outsourcers Biopharmaceutical companies are flocking to consultants, outsourcers, and staffing firms to help with discrete clinical trial processes to gain access to advanced technologies and reduce the drain on already-scarce IT resources. |
InternetNews May 19, 2006 Andy Patrizio |
Google Cleans Ajax for Java Google Web Toolkit takes regular Java apps and converts them to the often-incompatible JavaScript for all browsers. |
Bio-IT World May 2006 Mark D. Uehling |
Clinical Speakers Enjoy Industry Acceptance For the first time at the Bio-IT World Conference, the clinical speakers did not wring their hands about whether their tools would be accepted by the industry. This year, it was a question of how quickly technology would be used to expedite trials and raise the quality of the data therein. |
Pharmaceutical Executive July 1, 2005 Rob Case |
In Search of the Holy Grail Chasing ultimate clinical trial efficiency, one small step at a time. A carefully considered approach to data integration can benefit every stakeholder from the investigator to the pharmaceutical executive. |
InternetNews March 20, 2007 Sean Michael Kerner |
Google: AJAX is All About Abusing Standards Developer of Google Maps argues that it is developers and not standards that are driving AJAX forward. |
InternetNews December 14, 2006 Sean Michael Kerner |
Google Opens Up AJAX The Google AJAX Web toolkit, beginning with the release candidate for version 1.3, will now entirely be licensed under the open source Apache 2.0 license. |
Bio-IT World October 2006 William Claypool |
The Perfect Circle With the most current technologies accelerating adaptive trial designs, the future holds great promise. |
InternetNews May 9, 2006 Andy Patrizio |
Coming Soon: The AJAX-based OS Linspire is preparing a new Linux-based operating system that uses AJAX as the interface for all of its applications and documents. |
InternetNews December 2, 2005 Brian Livingston |
AJAX: The Way Word Processing Will Be Big changes in the world of group document editing are predicted, thanks to AJAX. |
Bio-IT World June 2005 Mark D. Uehling |
Abandon Paper! Use a PDA! The entire pharmaceutical industry is migrating away from paper diaries, fraught as they are with patients' well-meaning but well-documented procrastinations and fabrications. But electronic gadgets are not inexpensive, even for rich sponsors of clinical trials. |
InternetNews March 23, 2007 Sean Michael Kerner |
The AJAX World Belongs to Google Google brought the term and approach that is AJAX to the mainstream, and Google is continuing to be the guiding light in AJAX development today. |
InternetNews January 9, 2006 Clint Boulton |
ClearNova Open Sources AJAX Development Software startup ClearNova is releasing its development environment under an open source license to help proliferate AJAX as the preferred tool for building rich Internet applications. |
The Motley Fool November 30, 2007 Brian Orelli |
Clinical Trial Failures Don't Bother These Companies Contract research organizations, outsourcing companies hired by pharmaceutical and biotech companies to run pre-clinical tests and clinical trials for them, succeed even when drugs fail, and more work may be coming their way. |
InternetNews February 1, 2006 Clint Boulton |
Tech Vendors Call For Open AJAX IBM, Google, Yahoo and others kick off a project to facilitate AJAX adoption; BEA Systems launched Workshop Studio 3.0, which provides Eclipse Tools for the Enterprise JavaBeans 3.0 database persistence interface. |
InternetNews March 20, 2008 Sean Michael Kerner |
Can We Fix The Web? The problem with the modern Web is that it's insecure and fixes may be a long time coming. |
Search Engine Watch December 19, 2006 David Wallace |
Web 2.0 Technologies and Search Visibility CSS, Ajax and Web 2.0 - more than mere buzz words, these are advancing technologies that bring vast improvement in the design and usability of web sites. What about search engines? Do these new technologies help search visibility or hurt it? |
Bio-IT World January 21, 2005 Sprouse & Shiple |
Strategic Insights: Building Integrated Research Networks Uniting a region's medical centers on clinical projects could create a new model for clinical trials. |
Bio-IT World October 2006 Mark D. Uehling |
Datasci Suits Threaten Industry The U.S. Patent Office is under scrutiny in a series of lawsuits that are baffling the world of clinical trial technology. |
Bio-IT World June 2006 Mark D. Uehling |
Real-Time Trials Currently, there is more visibility into the precise location of a FedEx package than the progress of a multimillion-dollar clinical drug trial. But adaptive design trials are changing that. |
Linux Journal September 30, 2006 Reuven Lerner |
At the Forge - Beginning Ajax How to put the A (asynchronous) in Ajax. |
InternetNews November 9, 2006 Andy Patrizio |
Microsoft Ships Second 'Atlas' Beta Microsoft has launched the second beta of its ASP.NET AJAX Extensions, formerly known as Atlas, a trio of extensions designed to make it easy to develop Ajax applications on Microsoft's .Net platform. |
InternetNews September 13, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
Gates: XML Is Heart of Next Platform At Microsoft's Professional Developers Conference, Microsoft lays bare more of the Windows Vista guts. |