Clinical research plays a vital role in developing new drugs, new surgical procedures and devices, and new actions to advance our health. It also helps doctors identify people at risk for certain diseases, and it can also help prevent or delay certain diseases. Many of these advances happened because people like you volunteered to take part in clinical trials and other types of clinical research.
Through our three-part mission of healing, education and discovery (research), The University of Tennessee Medical Center actively participates in many types of clinical research. As the region’s academic medical center, we answer your health questions by developing, discovering and using the latest advances in medicine.
People take part in clinical research because they want to help advance new discoveries, because they are empowered by taking a more active role in their health, and because they can gain access to new medications and therapies before they are widely available. Volunteers include healthy people and people with known health problems.
As the region’s academic medical center, The University of Tennessee Medical Center is actively involved in more than 50 medical trials. We are consistently ranked among the nation’s top hospitals by U.S. News & World Report.
Investigators conduct research through the medical center’s primary research support operation, the Office of Clinical Trials as well as the UT Graduate School of Medicine. Volunteer Research Group also performs research in conjunction with physicians at the medical center.
Some trials currently being performed include:
Learn more about participating in research at the medical center:
For more information, contact the Office of Clinical Trials at 865-305-9773.