About
Making clinical trial information easier to understand.
TrialRoots helps people understand public listings, look up unfamiliar terms, prepare
questions, and support clinical-trial conversations with a medical team.
Why TrialRoots exists
Clinical research can struggle with participation for many reasons. Education, health
literacy, trust, cost, travel, time, and communication barriers can all affect whether
someone understands a trial conversation or feels prepared to ask questions. Public
trial listings can also be difficult to scan, especially when a patient or family is
already under stress.
What TrialRoots helps people do
TrialRoots brings the main education tools into one calm place: learn how trials work,
explore public listings, use the
clinical trial glossary, prepare
questions for a doctor or study team, save public listings,
and find ways to support someone considering a trial.
Research behind the project
TrialRoots began from the founder’s own lack of understanding about how medical
research is collected and used in the medical world. During research, the founder found
that clinical trials are often under-participated in and that education and
health-literacy barriers are one important reason. Medical literacy is difficult, and
research papers themselves can be inaccessible, so a website better fits the mission of
helping people prepare for real conversations.
How TrialRoots content is created
TrialRoots uses public ClinicalTrials.gov listing data, keyword and template processing,
and AI-assisted plain-language transformation to make public information easier to scan.
These explanations are meant to support questions, not replace the official registry
record or a medical team’s guidance.
Sources and review process
Official registry pages remain the source of record for clinical trial listings.
TrialRoots summaries may not capture every protocol detail, and public records can
change. Reviewed or updated dates are shown only where real metadata exists. Some
glossary source and review metadata is still incomplete, so TrialRoots does not display
source or review claims where the data is not available.
Independence and limitations
TrialRoots is not affiliated with or endorsed by ClinicalTrials.gov, NIH, trial sponsors,
or study sites unless that is specifically documented. TrialRoots does not determine
eligibility, recommend participation, confirm medical benefit, or replace medical or
legal advice. The official registry page and the study team remain authoritative.
Guided by expert feedback
TrialRoots has been shaped by feedback from medical communication, health literacy, and
UX reviewers. That feedback influenced wording, health-literacy choices, interface
clarity, and patient-centered organization. This does not mean the site is medically
certified, clinically validated, or endorsed by reviewers.
Feedback and corrections
If something seems confusing, outdated, inaccessible, or medically concerning, visitors
can send feedback to TrialRoots. Correction reports help
identify places where public explanations, glossary terms, or interface behavior need
closer review.