Most sites already have systems in place to manage travel and reimbursements. That’s not the issue. The work still has to get done, and it adds up quickly.
Participant logistics are constant. Booking travel, tracking expenses, answering questions, following up on missing details. None of it is especially complex, but it pulls site staff into a steady stream of small tasks that are hard to ignore.
Over time, that administrative load starts to compete with everything else. Study coordination, participant care, and day-to-day research responsibilities don’t slow down just because logistics need attention.
Scout Coordinator is a service, not a role you have to hire or manage. It functions as an extension of the site team, stepping in to handle the day-to-day logistics that would otherwise sit with site staff.
It works alongside Scout’s Patient Liaison team and the Scout Portal, taking on the administrative work tied to participant travel and reimbursements while keeping everything aligned with study requirements.
Scope of support:
When participant logistics stop running through the site, the day-to-day shifts quickly. Fewer emails to chase. Fewer requests to track down. Less time spent entering and re-entering the same information.
Instead of managing a steady stream of travel questions and reimbursement follow-ups, site staff step in only when confirmation is needed. The back-and-forth drops off, and delays tied to missing or late entries become less common.
Participants get consistent support from a team focused on logistics, and site staff stay focused on patient care and study responsibilities.
Sites don’t have to learn a new system or change how they work. The process is straightforward, and site involvement is lighter, not heavier.
From there, travel coordination, reimbursements, and participant communication are handled without routing every step back through the site.
Scout Coordinator isn’t necessary for every study. But when logistics start to pile up, the impact shows up quickly.
This service tends to make the most sense for:
In these cases, taking logistics out of the site workflow helps keep things moving without adding more pressure to the team.
When logistics aren’t routed through the site, staff can stay focused on patient care and study responsibilities without getting pulled into constant administrative work. The day-to-day is easier to manage, and fewer tasks compete for attention.
Participants aren’t left figuring out travel or reimbursements on their own, and sponsors see more consistency across sites because fewer details fall through the cracks. The work still gets done. It just gets handled by the right team.
If delays or pressure are building in your study, this is one place worth a closer look. If you want to see how Scout Coordinator could fit into your study, get in touch with our team.