| Clinical Research Coordinator | Clinical Research Associate | Clinical Research Manager |
| Degree Required | Bachelor's degree at minimum; some have a master's | Bachelor's degree at minimum; some have a master's | Bachelor's degree at minimum; master's is often required |
| Key Responsibilities | Organizes research information | Helps administer clinical trials | Manages and administers clinical trials |
| Licensure/Certification Required | Voluntary certification | Voluntary certification | Voluntary certification |
| Job Outlook (2020-2030) | 6% growth* (all types of natural science managers) | 6% growth* (all types of natural science managers) | 6% growth* (all types of natural science managers) |
| Mean Salary (2021) | $65,560** | $61,869** | $103,261** |
Sources: *U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS); **Salary.com
What Kind of Job Could I Have?
With a master's degree in clinical research, you may work as a clinical research associate, clinical research coordinator or clinical research manager. If you become a clinical research associate, you may oversee the clinical trial as well as documenting, evaluating and publishing the results.
As a clinical research coordinator, your job may include selecting suitable candidates for clinical trials, helping conduct testing and monitoring patients throughout the process. With experience, you may become a clinical research manager and oversee the clinical trial process, ensuring that your staff follows proper research protocols and abide by Food and Drug Administration regulations.
Pharmaceutical companies, the National Institutes of Health, research hospitals and medical laboratories are just a few places that hire clinical researchers. Your job responsibilities may include monitoring patients involved in clinical trials, and thus, you could work days, evenings and weekends.
Is Certification Available?
The Society of Clinical Research Associates (www.socra.org) and the Association of Clinical Research Professionals (www.acrpnet.org) both provide you with the opportunity for certification. Certifications from these organizations require you to meet varying levels of work experience and education. For example, as a master's degree holder, you won't need as much work experience to be eligible for certification as someone who only holds an undergraduate degree. If you are currently working in clinical research and meet these organizations' eligibility requirements, you may take a certification exam. These certifications are optional.
What Kind of Salary Could I Have?
Salaries for clinical researchers vary based on the type of research you are conducting and where you are conducting it. Salary.com says that salaries for clinical research coordinators in the United States were $56,320 for the 25th percentile and $75,716 for the 75th percentile, as they reported in December 2021. Corresponding figures were $54,465 and $68,708 for clinical research associates in December 2021, and $91,702 and $120,633 for clinical research managers during the same period.
For individuals who have pursued this type of master's degree, they may be interested in a couple of medical related careers. Medical assistants may work in hospitals, clinics, or doctors' offices. Their main responsibilities typically include meeting with patients, discussing and recording their medical history, measuring vital signs, administering medicine, and conferring with the doctor. You could also consider a career as a medical or health services managers. These professionals are in charge of a variety of administrative and executive tasks in a hospital or clinic.