Postgraduate
MSc and Postgraduate Diploma in Clinical Trials
Lead
College
Academic
Direction: LSHTM
The London School
of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) is the University of London's
major resource for postgraduate teaching and research in public
health and tropical medicine, as well as the leading postgraduate
medical institution in these subjects in Europe.
It has an
international standing with a staff that has unique
multidisciplinary and international experience.
The Course Director
is Diana Elbourne, Professor of Healthcare Evaluation in the Medical
Statistics Unit at LSHTM. She has a mixed background, having
graduated in Social Administration from LSE before gaining an MSc
(Stats) at Brunel University, where she also worked as a Statistics
lecturer. Her PhD at LSE was based on a randomized controlled trial
(RCT) of women having access to their medical records. From
1981-1996 Diana was at the National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit in
Oxford, holding the roles of social statistician, trials
statistician, and later Director of the Perinatal Trials Service.
During this period she was involved in a large number of RCTs and
systematic reviews. She continued this applied research after moving
to LSHTM in 1997, broadening from the perinatal field to include
trials in liver transplantation, adult intensive care and
nutritional interventions for older people. Her methodological
research includes cluster RCTs, data monitoring committees,
reporting of trials, and qualitative research on the views of people
participating in trials. Between 2000-2005 Diana also worked part
time as Professor of Evidence Informed Policy and Practice at the
Institute of Education. Her main teaching interests are in clinical
trials, starting with short courses whilst in Oxford, and extending
these to the clinical trials unit in the MSc in Medical Statistics
and the annual short course in clinical trials at LSHTM.
LSHTM has a
concentration of staff with international reputations in the
planning, co-ordination, statistical analysis and reporting of
clinical trials. A team led by Professor Diana Elbourne from
their Clinical Trials Research Group, based within the Department of
Epidemiology & Population Health, have designed and developed this
course with colleagues from the Department of Infectious Diseases.