An individual or entity that takes responsibility for and initiates a study, but that does not actually conduct the investigation. The sponsor may be an individual or pharmaceutical company, governmental agency, academic institution, private organization, or other organization.
(1) organizing organization of a tournament;(2) one who hires a partner and/or teammates.
An organization which selects and manages the choice of health insurance products for a group of individuals. Sponsors include employers, government and quasi-public organizations established to manage insurance choice (e.g., HIPC
A person or entity that initiates a clinical investigation of a drug—usually the drug manufacturer or research institution that developed the drug. The sponsor does not actually conduct the investigation, but rather distributes the new drug to investigators and physicians for clinical trials. The drug is administered to participants under the immediate direction of an investigator who is not also a sponsor. A clinical investigator may, however, serve as a sponsor-investigator. The sponsor assumes responsibility for investigating the new drug, including responsibility for compliance with applicable laws and regulations. The sponsor, for example, is responsible for obtaining FDA approval to conduct a trial and for reporting the results of the trial to the FDA.
An individual, company, institution, or organization that initiates, manages, and/or finances a clinical trial.
Individual, company, institution or organization that initiates a clinical investigation and takes responsibility for the management and financing of the study.
The person who takes on ultimate responsibility for the initiation, management and financing (or arranging the financing) of a clinical trial (see question-specific-guidance under A59).
an individual, corporate body, institution or organization that conducts a clinical trial, which includes the management and financing of that trial
an individual, family, church, civic group or other local community organization
an individual who has directly and actively led an extra-curricular activity or organization the student has participated in
an institution or person that presents conferences and seminars
an organization committed to funding and volunteering labor in the construction of a Habitat home
an organization prepared to take a long term partnering arrangement in managing the MPA
a person or organization who intends to present or conduct a CLE activity and who may or may not have submitted it for CLE accreditation
person or institution promoting investment in limited partnerships, mutual funds or stocks
A government agency (such as the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Defense, or the Department of Veteran's Affairs), non-profit organization (such as a foundation or charity), medical institution, university, for-profit company (such as a pharmaceutical or medical device company), or group of individuals (such as physicians) who fund or pay for the research study. A sponsor may also take responsibility for initiating and managing the research study.
The company or organization that is paying for the conduct of a clinical study; usually the pharmaceutical company whose drug is being tested.
Any individual, business, or other organization that provides money, products, or services to an event, person, or organization, in exchange for public recognition.
A person or entity that initiates a clinical investigation of a drug or device; usually the manufacturer or research institution that developed the drug or device
Sponsor is the parent organization that contributes the initial capital of the asset management company (AMC). e.g. Kotak Mahindra Finance is the sponsor for Kotak Mahindra Mutual Fund.
A person or other entity that initiates a clinical investigation, but that does not actually conduct the investigation, i.e., the test article is administered or dispensed to, or used involving, a subject under the immediate direction of another individual. A person other than an individual (e.g., a corporation or agency) that uses one or more of its own employees to conduct an investigation that it has initiated is considered to be a sponsor (not a sponsor-investigator) and the employees are considered to be investigators.
The person or group who designs and pays for a Clinical Trial.
Individual or organization that has commissioned an established cachetmaker to prepare a special design in addition to the regular cachet for a particular issue. The term is sometimes used interchangeably with "cachetmaker."
Individual, company, institution or organization taking responsibility for initiation, management and financing of the study.
The organization that develops the treatment, drug or test, designs the study, and pays for costs associated with the clinical trial.
The organisation that takes primary responsibility for ensuring that the design of the study meets appropriate standards, and that arrangements are in place to ensure appropriate conduct and reporting. The sponsor is usually, but does not have to be, the main funder.
specifies the name of a sponsoring organization or institution.
The individual, group, or organization which provides the funds for the evaluation.
Many Web pages have organizations, businesses, institutions like universities or non-profit foundations, or other interests which "sponsor" the page. Frequently you can find a link titled "Sponsors" or an "About us" link explaining who or what (if anyone) is sponsoring the page. Sometimes the advertisers on the page (banner ads, links, buttons to sites that sell or promote something) are "sponsors." WHY is this important? Sponsors and the funding they provide may, or may not, influence what can be said on the page or site -- can bias what you find, by excluding some opposing viewpoint or causing some other imbalanced information. The site is not bad because of sponsors, but you they should alert you to the need to evaluate a page or site very carefully.
The person or agency responsible for the organization and conduct of a special aviation event. Fr: organisateur
The company or institute funding and overseeing a drug during the clinical trials process is considered the drug's sponsor.
The entity responsible for conducting and financing a clinical trial. Sponsors can be governmental agencies, companies, medical or educational institutions, or even private individuals.
The organization(s), i.e., national weapons laboratory or laboratories, the U.S. Department of Defense and/or the United Kingdom, that is/are responsible for conducting a particular nuclear weapon test/detonation.
v.t., n. v.t. 1. to endorse (an organization or cause). 2. to agree to assume the financial responsibility of (all or part of the cost of a special event or a special event or a special program or activity). n. a person or corporation that sponsors.
The pharmaceutical company, research institution, or healthcare organization that funds a clinical trial and designs the protocol.
A company, institution, group, foundation, or government agency that funds (provides money) for a clinical study.
Person or organisation that accepts responsibility for all or part of a student's fees or expenses.
An individual, company, institution, or organization which takes responsibility for the initiation, management, and/or financing of a clinical trial.
An individual, company, institution, or organization that initiates and finances a research study. A sponsor is not necessarily the entity that conducts the research.
(1) Limited partnerships: The general partner which organizes and sells the partnership. (2) Mutual fund: The underwriter of the fund.
Individual, company, institution, or organization that takes responsibility for initiation, management, and financing of research
An investment firm that organizes a unit investment trust and offers the units for sale.
The pharmaceutical company, research institution, or other health/governmental organization that funds a clinical trial and designs its protocol.