Journal of Clinical Trials and Regulations (e-ISSN: 2582-4422) https://matjournals.net/pharmacy/index.php/JCTR <p><strong>JCTR</strong> is a peer-reviewed academic journal which embraces articles related to Clinical Trials and Regulations. The journal with a wide scope in the arena of pharmaceutical sciences covers the topics intended to be of interest to a broad audience of pharmaceutical professionals and ideally placed to serve the needs of their readers. The focuses of the journal are ICH/GCP, DMF and Dossier, Clinical Research, Pharmacovigilance, USDFA/EU, EU Clinical Trial developments, Manufacturing, Quality Control, GCP, ICH, Ethics, IRB, Regulations for Clinical Trials, Clinical Trials Data Management.</p> en-US Sat, 31 Jan 2026 10:13:05 +0000 OJS 3.3.0.8 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss 60 Psychological Problems and Adverse Childhood Experiences among Sanitation Workers in India: An Ordinal Logistic Regression Analysis https://matjournals.net/pharmacy/index.php/JCTR/article/view/334 <p><em>Sanitation workers in India are a marginalized workforce group exposed to adverse working environments, social stigma, and socioeconomic insecurity. Nevertheless, scarce empirical interest has been devoted to the role of pre-adolescent hardships in determining their mental and behavioural consequences at adulthood. The paper will discuss how the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) could affect the development of substance-related psychological issues in sanitation workers in India. The data were collected using the quantitative and cross-sectional design, where 1,418 sanitation workers in ten states in India were sampled with the help of a structured and interviewer-administered questionnaire. The cumulative ACE score was used to measure ACE exposure and the degree of psychological problems using three ordinal outcomes, frequency of alcohol/drug/tobacco use, lack of ability to control substance use and the neglect of personal/family responsibilities owing to substance use. The PLUM procedure in SPSS was used to estimate the ordinal logistic regression models. Findings of the bivariate models revealed that the higher ACE scores, the more substance use, loss of control, and neglect of duties. Adjacent models, which incorporated the sociodemographic variables as well as occupational variables, affirmed that the relationships were statistically significant and verified all the six hypotheses of the study. The results revealed that cumulative childhood adversity has a long-lasting effect on the psychological functioning of adults and especially among employees whose jobs are characterized by stigmatization and instability like manual scavenging. Although there are certain breaches to the proportional odds assumption, the trends and effect consistency demonstrate the strength of the findings. This research paper brings to the literature the extension of ACE research to a less studied population of occupational health workers in India, and the importance of occupational health policies and early prevention measures on long-term psychosocial risks in sanitation workers.</em></p> Akanksha Chandele, Atufa Khan, Faseeh Amin Copyright (c) 2026 Journal of Clinical Trials and Regulations (e-ISSN: 2582-4422) https://matjournals.net/pharmacy/index.php/JCTR/article/view/334 Wed, 01 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000 mRNA Vaccines and Therapeutics: Current Trends and Future Perspectives https://matjournals.net/pharmacy/index.php/JCTR/article/view/301 <p><em>mRNA vaccines and therapeutics have emerged as revolutionary tools in the fight against infectious diseases, notably during the COVID-19 pandemic, </em><em>displaying extraordinary speed, effectiveness, and adaptability. This article examines the current trends in mRNA technology, highlighting improvements in vaccine creation </em><em>including the deployment of mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines and their subsequent success in global immunization efforts. The paper also examines the broadening therapeutic applications of mRNA, from oncology and genetic disorders to autoimmune diseases, and the technical innovations enabling these strides, such as lipid nanoparticle delivery systems and mRNA optimization. Furthermore, the article delves into the challenges faced by the field, including stability concerns, manufacturing scalability, and regulatory hurdles.</em> <em>The future of mRNA technology is examined, with an emphasis on its potential to transform personalized medicine, preventive healthcare, and global disease control.</em><em> The integration of mRNA-based approaches into broader therapeutic and vaccination strategies is poised to redefine modern medicine, offering unprecedented flexibility in addressing both known and emerging health threats.</em></p> Munnangi Vasanthi, Atluri Bhavana, Nanneboyina Sudeepthi, Naidu Denisri, Namburu Srivalli, Kondaveeti Jahanavi, Padmalatha Kantamaneni Copyright (c) 2026 Journal of Clinical Trials and Regulations (e-ISSN: 2582-4422) https://matjournals.net/pharmacy/index.php/JCTR/article/view/301 Sat, 31 Jan 2026 00:00:00 +0000