Diabetes and Foot Ulcer Study

Valiance Clinical Research is enrolling adults with diabetes and hard-to-heal foot ulcers for a wound care research study at two California locations: San Diego and Northridge. Qualified participants receive all study-related wound treatment and care at no cost, plus $50–$250 compensation per visit for time and travel. Free transportation to and from the study site is available at both locations. If you’re living with diabetes and struggling with a foot ulcer that won’t heal, this study may offer advanced wound care options and the opportunity to contribute to important medical research. Our specialized wound care team provides close monitoring and expert treatment throughout your participation. Call 858-352-6449 (San Diego) or 747-799-0050 (Northridge) or sign up online to see if you qualify.
Heart Disease and Obesity Study

Valiance Clinical Research is enrolling adults with heart failure and obesity for a clinical research study at four convenient California locations: Tarzana, Huntington Park, San Diego, and Northridge. Qualified participants receive all study-related medical care and medication at no cost, plus $50–$250 compensation per visit for time and travel. Free transportation to and from the study site is available at all locations. If you’re living with both heart failure and obesity, this study may offer advanced care options and the opportunity to contribute to important medical research. Call your nearest location or sign up online to see if you qualify.
Why Clinical Trials Have Specific Requirements (And What They Mean for You)

Clinical trial inclusion criteria define who can participate in medical research based on age, disease stage, lab values, and treatment history. These requirements protect participant safety and ensure scientific validity by creating comparable groups and testing treatments in appropriate populations.
Kidney Disease Study

Join our kidney disease research study in Tarzana, CA. Receive $50-$250 per visit,
free medical care, and free transportation. Now enrolling adults 18+ with NASH or MASH diagnosis. Call 818-938-9167.
Who Can Participate in Clinical Trials? A Complete Guide to Eligibility

Who can participate in clinical trials spans all ages, health statuses, and backgrounds. Eligibility depends on specific trial criteria, including age requirements, disease characteristics, health markers, medication history, and lifestyle factors for each individual study.
Am I Eligible? Understanding Clinical Trial Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria

Clinical trial eligibility is determined through inclusion criteria defining who studies need and exclusion criteria protecting participant safety. This guide explains common age, diagnosis, disease stage, and treatment history requirements, plus why screening visits verify eligibility.
Clinical Trials Aren’t Just for Terminal Illness: What You Should Know

Clinical trials only terminal illness is a persistent misconception. Trials need healthy volunteers for prevention research, people with early-stage disease for intervention studies, and those with chronic conditions for quality of life trials across all health stages.
Are Clinical Trials Dangerous? Separating Fact from Fiction

Clinical trial facts vs myths about danger require honest assessment. Trials do carry risks including adverse events, but multiple protections like FDA review, IRB oversight, and real-time monitoring reduce harm. Risk levels vary by phase and condition severity, and trial monitoring often exceeds standard care.
Liver Disease Study

Join our liver disease research study in Tarzana, CA. Receive $50-$250 per visit,
free medical care, and free transportation. Now enrolling adults 18+ with NASH or MASH diagnosis. Call 818-938-9167.
The ‘Guinea Pig’ Myth: Why Clinical Trial Participants Are Partners, Not Subjects

Guinea pig clinical trials terminology suggests helpless subjects being experimented on. Modern trials operate as partnerships with informed consent, withdrawal rights, independent oversight protecting participants, and mutual respect between researchers and volunteers contributing to medical advancement.