Author:
Watson Lyndsey F,Rayner Jo-Anne,Lumley Judith M
Abstract
Aim: To describe the process involved in obtaining
ethics approval for a study aiming to recruit women
from all maternity hospitals in Victoria, Australia.
Design: Observational data of the application
process involving 85 hospitals throughout Victoria
in 2001.
Results: Twenty-three of the 85 hospitals had a
Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC) constituted
in accordance with the National Health and
Medical Council requirements; 27 agreed to accept
decisions from other hospitals having HRECs and
27 relied on ethics advisory committees, hospital
managers, clinical staff, quality assurance committees
or lawyers for ethics decisions. Four of the
latter did not approve the study. Eight hospitals no
longer provided maternity services in the recruitment
period. The process took 16 months, 26 000
sheets of paper, 258 copies of the application and
the cost was about $30 000. Approval was eventually
obtained for recruitment at 73 hospitals.
Discussion: Difficulties exist in obtaining timely
ethics approval for multicentre studies due to a
complex uncoordinated system. All hospitals
should have explicit protocols for dealing with
research ethics applications so that they can be
processed in a straightforward and timely manner.
To facilitate this, those without properly constituted
HRECs should be affiliated with one hospital that
has an HREC.
Cited by
10 articles.
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