The detailed rules for what kind of people a researcher will let into a certain study; for example, being over 60 and having a diagnosis of anxiety disorder could be eligibility criteria for a study about how a new medication works for elderly, anxious people.
Standards that describe the customers who can participate in a utility's DSM program.
These are criteria which you must satisfy before an account or service application can be progressed.
Participant eligibility criteria for clinical trials can range from general (age, sex, type of cancer) to specific (prior treatment, tumor characteristics, blood cell counts, organ function). Eligibility criteria may also vary with trial phase. In phase I and II trials, the criteria often focus on making sure that people who might be harmed because of abnormal organ function or other factors are not put at risk. Phase II and III trials often add criteria regarding disease type and stage, and number of prior treatments.
The requirements that people must meet before they can participate in a clinical trial.
Criteria, set in advance, for who can be in a particular research study. These criteria include such factors as age, gender, the type and stage of a disease, previous treatment history, and other medical conditions. These criteria are designed to make the study scientifically useful and to avoid unnecessary risks to subjects. They are applied to all children who might want to participate in the study.
These are criteria that must be satisfied before an application can be considered.
Summary criteria for participant selection.
In clinical trials, requirements that must be met for an individual to be included in a study. These requirements help make sure that patients in a trial are similar to each other in terms of specific factors such as age, type and stage of cancer, general health, and previous treatment. When all participants meet the same eligibility criteria, it gives researchers greater confidence that results of the study are caused by the intervention being tested and not by other factors.
These form the basis on which children are allowed to get services from an agency. These criteria usually include age, disability, and income. They can also include where you live, whether your child is male or female, what kind of medical insurance you have, or what other kinds of problems your family is facing.
Criteria which are used to ascertain whether a person is eligible to receive services. It is constructed as a Continuum of Service provision from relatively low cost provision (primary and secondary scales of intervention) to high cost intervention services (tertiary and quaternary scales of intervention).
The specific conditions that a student must meet to qualify for financial assistance. In addition to demonstrating need for most programs, general eligibility criteria for federal student aid include, among other things, citizenship status and selective service registration. Individual programs may carry other specific eligibility requirements in addition to the general eligibility criteria. Many eligibility criteria, such as citizenship, are checked via automated matches of FAFSA information and that contained on other federal databases.
The clinical and demographic characteristics that define which persons are eligible to be enrolled in a trial.
(ell-i-gi-BILL-i-tee kry-tear-ee-uh) A set of characteristics or requirements which must be satisfied before a patient can be enrolled in a clinical trial.