Web portal designed by U of T startup connects COVID-19 researchers with potential study participants
Two 狐狸视频 alumni have created a web portal to connect COVID-19 researchers with potential research study participants.
Since launching in March, there have been more than 770 COVID-19 studies posted on the portal from around the world.
Catherine Chan, co-founder and CEO of Honeybee Hub, the U of T startup behind the portal, says COVID-19 researchers are looking for a range of study participants, including healthy individuals.
鈥淲e鈥檙e in the recruitment space for research studies and there鈥檚 so many research studies that are emerging,鈥 says Chan, who graduated in 2018 with a master's degree from the department of nutritional sciences in the Faculty of Medicine.
鈥淲e saw this huge gap where researchers are struggling to find participants and we wanted to make a publicly accessible portal with consolidated information on COVID-19 studies.鈥
Chan and Weiwei Li, the company鈥檚 co-founder and chief technology officer, launched Honeybee Hub two years ago and are working with U of T鈥檚 Health Innovation Hub (H2i), one of several entrepreneurship hubs on campus.
Li, who did an undergraduate and master鈥檚 degree at U of T鈥檚 Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering, says the web portal is designed so potential participants can research which studies are located near them and which ones can be done remotely.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 a huge problem that exists right now 鈥 not just for COVID-19 trials, but all kinds of trials,鈥 says Li. 鈥淎 large number of trials get delayed because of recruitment challenges.鈥
People who have no symptoms of COVID-19, and believe themselves to be healthy, can also search for those opportunities.
鈥淗ealthy people don鈥檛 really think they can participate in trials,鈥 says Li. "But many trials require healthy participants, including the COVID-19 vaccine trials that have just begun testing.鈥
Part of what drove the development of the web portal was Chan鈥檚 goal to de-stigmatize participating in clinical trials and research studies in general.
鈥淕enerally, I see stigma to participating in research,鈥 she says. 鈥淐linical trials can be associated by some people with needles or blood draws, or being sick or in the hospital. That鈥檚 a legitimate fear a lot of people have, and so they may have reservations about participating in research.
鈥淏ut participating may [also] have positive outcomes, like getting access to alternative treatments earlier.鈥
Another factor is the cost to recruit participants for a study, which Chan knows first-hand after her experiences trying to recruit study participants while she was a graduate student.
鈥淲e want to use this as an example to build a case and show people that research participation can achieve a greater good,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t can be a huge contribution to helping solve the massive problems posed by this global pandemic.鈥