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Bioavailability Study Design: Healthy Subjects Versus Patients01:15

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Bioavailability studies are essential for evaluating a drug's therapeutic efficacy and understanding its absorption patterns under various physiological conditions. Conducting such studies on target patient populations provides more relevant data by simulating real-world disease states. However, practical challenges often necessitate the use of young, healthy adult volunteers as study subjects.Patients may exhibit altered drug absorption patterns due to the effects of the disease itself,...
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Bioavailability studies are essential for understanding how a drug is absorbed, distributed, metabolized, and excreted in the body. These studies assess the extent and rate at which the active pharmaceutical agent becomes available at the site of action. The design of bioavailability studies can involve single-dose or multiple-dose regimens, each with distinct advantages and limitations.Single-dose studies are the preferred approach due to their simplicity and reduced drug exposure for...
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Ideally, the people who observe and record the children’s behavior are unaware of who was assigned to the experimental or control group, in order to control for experimenter bias. Experimenter bias refers to the possibility that a researcher’s expectations might skew the results of the study. Remember, conducting an experiment requires a lot of planning, and the people involved in the research project have a vested interest in supporting their hypotheses. If the observers knew which...
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Clinical development focuses on how the drug will interact with the human body and encompasses four key phases of clinical trials, each serving a specific purpose in assessing the safety and effectiveness of new drugs. These phases overlap and build upon one another. Phase I involves a small group of healthy volunteers (typically 20-80 individuals) or, in cases where significant toxicity is expected, patients with the targeted disease, such as cancer or AIDS. The volunteers are tested for...
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Patient-centered care involves delivering care beyond inpatient hospitalization. Reflective practice can enhance a patient-centered approach. Reflective practice is a process of reasoning that considers all aspects of the present situation, including practicalities, learning from personal practice, and consideration of patient needs. Patients appreciate care decisions made while considering their input. Involving the patient in their care provides the patient with a sense of contribution rather...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jan 12, 2026

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What Patients Want? A Pilot Single-Center Study Prioritizing Patient Expectations.

Arvind G Kulkarni1, Abhijeet D Wadi2, Sameer Ruparel2

  • 1Consultant Spine Surgeon, Bombay Hospital and Medical Research Centre, Mumbai, India.

Global Spine Journal
|November 3, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Patient priorities for spine surgery change significantly after the procedure. Pre-operative counseling is essential to align patient expectations with surgical outcomes for better satisfaction.

Keywords:
minimally invasive surgical procedurepatient expectationspatient prioritiespatient satisfactionpre operative counsellingspine surgerytreatment outcome

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Area of Science:

  • Orthopedics
  • Neurosurgery
  • Patient-Reported Outcomes

Background:

  • Patient priorities significantly influence satisfaction with surgical outcomes.
  • Understanding pre-operative expectations is crucial for managing post-operative satisfaction in spine surgery.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate patient priorities regarding various surgical variables before and after spine surgery.
  • To assess the shift in patient priorities post-operatively.

Main Methods:

  • A prospective study involving 228 patients undergoing elective spine surgery.
  • Patients completed a 12-variable questionnaire pre- and post-operatively to rank priorities.
  • Exclusions included deformity correction, infections, trauma, or tumors.

Main Results:

  • Patient priorities varied significantly between pre-operative and post-operative assessments.
  • Leg pain relief dropped from the highest priority pre-operatively to 11th post-operatively.
  • Back pain relief rose to third priority, and cost ranked fifth post-operatively.

Conclusions:

  • Patient priorities regarding spine surgery outcomes shift considerably after the procedure.
  • Effective pre-operative counseling is vital to bridge the gap between patient expectations and surgical results.
  • Assessing patient needs pre-operatively is key to ensuring post-surgical satisfaction.