5 Forms
You can create various types of forms for your study: forms with one section, forms with two sectios, repeating or tabular forms, and lab forms.
- Create a form with one section
Forms hold all the questions you must ask subjects during a study. Standard forms should include questions that verify whether subjects meet eligibility criteria, such as whether a subject has signed an informed consent document or whether the subject is eligible for being enrolled in a rollover study. - Create a form with two sections
Forms with two sections must contain one or more questions and a table with repeating questions that are relevant and required for a subject. - Create a lab form
Lab forms hold all the questions and items that allow site users to properly collect local lab results and compare the collected data against lab normals to ensure that the correct normal range is associated with lab data. - Create a repeating form
Create a repeating form when you want to allow site users to collect multiple instances of the same data. - About Drug Reconciliation forms
You use a Drug Reconciliation form to collect data related to kits in order to help site or sponsor users keep track of kits that have been sent for destruction. - Preview a form
Check for inconsistencies and improve the data collection process by previewing a form and sharing it with other team members (for additional review) before using it in a Production study. - Add a form to a visit
You can add forms to visits in any order, but you'll save some time if you add forms in the order they should appear to site users. To check the work you did on a visit, reorder forms in a visit, or add more forms to a visit, click the visit in Visits & Events. - Import or duplicate a form
Duplicate a form from your current study or import a form another Production study, or another library study. - Leave and manage comments
You can leave comments in Study Design (Draft) mode and Testing mode, as well as in any library study.