← Volver a resultados
Ficha bibliográfica · Consulta y acceso
Artículo

A python’s embrace? Insurance and the global clinical trial

Janelle Winters · BMC · 2026

Material complementario disponible
Lectura rápida. Revisá los datos básicos del recurso y luego accedé al contenido desde el botón principal. En esta ficha solo se muestra la información necesaria para identificar la obra, citarla y abrirla.

Acceso al recurso

Entrá al contenido desde la opción principal o elegí otra fuente disponible.

Acceso principal

Material complementario disponible

El enlace apunta a material asociado, anexos, tablas, datos o página complementaria. No se marca como libro/texto completo.
Abrir material

Resumen

Descripción general del contenido del recurso.

Abstract Background Regulatory barriers present significant challenges to clinical trial approval during both “peacetime” and pandemics, particularly for multi-country clinical trials sponsored by academic institutions and low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). While such barriers have been depicted as a “python’s embrace”, analyses of trial approval efficiency and ethical frameworks have largely overlooked clinical trial insurance. Methods I interrogate the evolution of clinical trial indemnification mechanisms, rationales, and operationalisation over the past fifty years through a structured literature review. I then consider the procedural barriers faced by academic institutions conducting multi-country clinical research during the COVID-19 pandemic using a case study of the University of Oxford’s “COPCOV” trial, which was led by the Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit in Bangkok, Thailand. This includes thematic analysis of more than 65 semi-structured interviews with trial stakeholders and analysis of insurance documents from the Trial Master File and hundreds of stakeholder emails. Results Supplementary reinsurance policies cost over £110,000 during the COPCOV trial, delayed trial approvals by up to nine months in some countries, and were largely justified by sponsors based on concerns about reputational damage. I argue that risk frameworks grounded in financial risk management and the commercial sector have expanded within academic institutions and, when coupled with an expansion of national requirements for “local paper” insurance policies, create serious barriers to initiating trial sites in many LMICs. Conclusions Two potential reform pathways, which are grounded in procedural or systemic reforms and should be led by LMIC-based policymakers, could help to de-barrier clinical trial insurance procedures and ensure that evidence of efficacious (and affordable) countermeasures are available during future global health emergencies.

Cómo citar

Elegí el formato que necesitás y copiá la referencia al portapapeles.

APA 7

Winters, J. (2026). A python’s embrace? Insurance and the global clinical trial. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12961-026-01449-6

MLA

Winters, Janelle. "A python’s embrace? Insurance and the global clinical trial." 2026. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12961-026-01449-6.

Chicago

Winters, Janelle. 2026. "A python’s embrace? Insurance and the global clinical trial.". https://doi.org/10.1186/s12961-026-01449-6.

Harvard

Winters, J. 2026, A python’s embrace? Insurance and the global clinical trial, BMC, available at: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12961-026-01449-6 [Accessed 28 Jun. 2026].

Compartir e imprimir

Guardá la ficha, copiá su enlace permanente o imprimila como PDF.

Exportar referencia

Si usás un gestor bibliográfico, podés exportar el registro en los formatos más comunes.

Detalles del recurso

Información bibliográfica útil para confirmar que se trata del material correcto.

Título
A python’s embrace? Insurance and the global clinical trial
Autor / colaboradores
Janelle Winters
Editorial
BMC
Año de publicación
2026
ISSN
1478-4505
ISSN
1478-4505
Idioma
eng

Materias

Explorá otros recursos relacionados a partir de estas materias.

Copiado