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Clinical Research Coordinator
Full course · Monitoring, Close-Out & the Modern CRC
Clinical Research Coordinator
Full course · Monitoring, Close-Out & the Modern CRC
Free Lesson Preview
Module 1: Lesson 1
Manage the logistics of a monitoring visit day including workspace preparation, investigator availability coordination, team communication, and the practical choreography of supporting a monitor while maintaining other site operations.
A conceptual hero image depicting the controlled choreography of a monitoring visit day at a clinical research site. A well-organized workspace is prepared for a visiting monitor alongside the ongoing activity of a research site -- participant charts staged and ready, a coordinator moving between the monitor workspace and clinical areas, a wall clock indicating early morning. The scene conveys purposeful motion, parallel workflows, and the operational discipline required to host a monitoring visit while clinical operations continue uninterrupted.
The monitor will arrive in 30 minutes. The coordinator has two participant visits on the schedule -- one at 9:30, the other at 11:00. A sub-investigator needs to sign three case report forms before noon because she is in clinic all afternoon. The pharmacy called ten minutes ago with a question about an investigational product shipment that arrived yesterday with a temperature excursion flag. And the coordinator's email shows an updated participant list from the monitor, sent late last night, requesting records for two additional participants not on the original agenda.
This is not a crisis. This is a Tuesday.
Module 2 walked you through the preparation -- the two-week checklist, the two-day checklist, source document organization, binder verification. That work is done. Your documents are staged, your binder is current, your summary sheet is prepared. What this lesson addresses is everything that happens from the moment you walk through the door on visit day until the moment the monitor leaves. The logistics. The workspace. The team coordination. The relentless, hour-by-hour choreography of supporting a monitor's work while your other responsibilities do not pause.
I have watched hundreds of monitoring visits over the course of my career, and the difference between a site that handles visit day well and one that does not is rarely about the documents themselves. It is about the operational discipline surrounding those documents -- the physical space where the monitor works, the availability of the investigator, the communication with pharmacy and laboratory staff, the coordinator's ability to manage two parallel workflows without dropping either one. These are logistics, not science. But they are the logistics on which the quality of the entire visit depends.
Free Lesson Preview
Module 1: Lesson 1
Manage the logistics of a monitoring visit day including workspace preparation, investigator availability coordination, team communication, and the practical choreography of supporting a monitor while maintaining other site operations.
A conceptual hero image depicting the controlled choreography of a monitoring visit day at a clinical research site. A well-organized workspace is prepared for a visiting monitor alongside the ongoing activity of a research site -- participant charts staged and ready, a coordinator moving between the monitor workspace and clinical areas, a wall clock indicating early morning. The scene conveys purposeful motion, parallel workflows, and the operational discipline required to host a monitoring visit while clinical operations continue uninterrupted.
The monitor will arrive in 30 minutes. The coordinator has two participant visits on the schedule -- one at 9:30, the other at 11:00. A sub-investigator needs to sign three case report forms before noon because she is in clinic all afternoon. The pharmacy called ten minutes ago with a question about an investigational product shipment that arrived yesterday with a temperature excursion flag. And the coordinator's email shows an updated participant list from the monitor, sent late last night, requesting records for two additional participants not on the original agenda.
This is not a crisis. This is a Tuesday.
Module 2 walked you through the preparation -- the two-week checklist, the two-day checklist, source document organization, binder verification. That work is done. Your documents are staged, your binder is current, your summary sheet is prepared. What this lesson addresses is everything that happens from the moment you walk through the door on visit day until the moment the monitor leaves. The logistics. The workspace. The team coordination. The relentless, hour-by-hour choreography of supporting a monitor's work while your other responsibilities do not pause.
I have watched hundreds of monitoring visits over the course of my career, and the difference between a site that handles visit day well and one that does not is rarely about the documents themselves. It is about the operational discipline surrounding those documents -- the physical space where the monitor works, the availability of the investigator, the communication with pharmacy and laboratory staff, the coordinator's ability to manage two parallel workflows without dropping either one. These are logistics, not science. But they are the logistics on which the quality of the entire visit depends.
This is just the beginning
The full CRC track covers 8 courses from study start-up to close-out — the skills sponsors actually look for.
Start the CRC trackThis is just the beginning
The full CRC track covers 8 courses from study start-up to close-out — the skills sponsors actually look for.
Start the CRC track