I think it is copy and paste from prior guidance. Not sure they would update it in this format. Remember, reviewing the data and protocols is part of it. Given the fact that this trial started 20 years ago almost, they may not visit many actual sites. Who is there to discuss 15 years ago processes? The company has prepared and is ready for visits and done mock visit prep, but we don't know how many they will actually visit.
I read it the same way you did. Very Good news. Seems some motivated reasoning may be involved in twisting this. ______________________________ "that are scheduled to take place"
I read it the same way you did. Very Good news. Seems some motivated reasoning may be involved in twisting this. ______________________________ "that are scheduled to take place"
You cut out the context by removing 'in both the US and UK'
When someone says an event is "scheduled to take place in both the US and UK," it typically means that the event is planned for both countries, but it doesn't necessarily indicate that the specific dates are set. The phrase suggests that arrangements are in progress or that the event will occur in both locations, but you might need more details to find out the exact dates.