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Why are organisational approvals needed for low-risk staff studies in the UK? Procedures, barriers, and burdens
by
Board, Ruth
, Taylor, Vanessa
, Dickman, Andrew
, Swash, Brooke
, Lightbody, Liz
, Coyle, Seamus
, Partridge, Andrea
, Halvorsen, Jaime
, Payne, Sheila
, Preston, Nancy
, Dunleavy, Lesley
, Hulbert-Williams, Nick
, Walshe, Catherine
, Mason, Stephen
, Ellershaw, John
, Nwosu, Amara Callistus
, Gadoud, Amy
in
Agreements
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Focus groups
/ Health Administration
/ Health care
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services administration
/ Health Services Research
/ Humans
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Methodological studies
/ Methods
/ Nursing Research
/ Palliative Care - organization & administration
/ Palliative Care - standards
/ Palliative Care - statistics & numerical data
/ Public Health
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Research ethics
/ State Medicine - organization & administration
/ Surveys and questionnaires
/ United Kingdom
/ Working groups
2024
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Why are organisational approvals needed for low-risk staff studies in the UK? Procedures, barriers, and burdens
by
Board, Ruth
, Taylor, Vanessa
, Dickman, Andrew
, Swash, Brooke
, Lightbody, Liz
, Coyle, Seamus
, Partridge, Andrea
, Halvorsen, Jaime
, Payne, Sheila
, Preston, Nancy
, Dunleavy, Lesley
, Hulbert-Williams, Nick
, Walshe, Catherine
, Mason, Stephen
, Ellershaw, John
, Nwosu, Amara Callistus
, Gadoud, Amy
in
Agreements
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Focus groups
/ Health Administration
/ Health care
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services administration
/ Health Services Research
/ Humans
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Methodological studies
/ Methods
/ Nursing Research
/ Palliative Care - organization & administration
/ Palliative Care - standards
/ Palliative Care - statistics & numerical data
/ Public Health
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Research ethics
/ State Medicine - organization & administration
/ Surveys and questionnaires
/ United Kingdom
/ Working groups
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
Why are organisational approvals needed for low-risk staff studies in the UK? Procedures, barriers, and burdens
by
Board, Ruth
, Taylor, Vanessa
, Dickman, Andrew
, Swash, Brooke
, Lightbody, Liz
, Coyle, Seamus
, Partridge, Andrea
, Halvorsen, Jaime
, Payne, Sheila
, Preston, Nancy
, Dunleavy, Lesley
, Hulbert-Williams, Nick
, Walshe, Catherine
, Mason, Stephen
, Ellershaw, John
, Nwosu, Amara Callistus
, Gadoud, Amy
in
Agreements
/ Beliefs, opinions and attitudes
/ Focus groups
/ Health Administration
/ Health care
/ Health Informatics
/ Health services administration
/ Health Services Research
/ Humans
/ Medical personnel
/ Medical research
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Medicine, Experimental
/ Methodological studies
/ Methods
/ Nursing Research
/ Palliative Care - organization & administration
/ Palliative Care - standards
/ Palliative Care - statistics & numerical data
/ Public Health
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Research ethics
/ State Medicine - organization & administration
/ Surveys and questionnaires
/ United Kingdom
/ Working groups
2024
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Why are organisational approvals needed for low-risk staff studies in the UK? Procedures, barriers, and burdens
Journal Article
Why are organisational approvals needed for low-risk staff studies in the UK? Procedures, barriers, and burdens
2024
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Overview
Background
Health care staff should be given the opportunity to participate in research, but recruiting clinicians via their employing organisation is not always straightforward or quick in the UK. Unlike many countries outside the UK, very low-risk survey, interview or focus group studies can be subject to some of the same governance approval procedures as interventional studies. An exemplar study carried out by the NIHR funded Palliative Care Research Partnership North West Coast is used to highlight the challenges still faced by researchers and health care organisations when setting up a low-risk staff study across multiple NHS and non-NHS sites.
Methods
A study database was created and information was collected on the first point of contact with the clinical site, Health Research Authority (HRA) and local organisational approval times, time from trust or hospice agreement to the first survey participant recruited and overall site survey recruitment numbers. Descriptive statistics (median, range) were used to analyse these data.
Results
Across participating NHS trusts, it took a median of 147.5 days (range 99–195) from initial contact with the local collaborator to recruitment of the first survey participant and hospice sites mirrored these lengthy timescales (median 142 days, range 110–202). The lengthiest delays in the HRA approval process were the period between asking NHS trusts to assess whether they had capacity and capability to support the research and them granting local agreement. Local approval times varied between trusts and settings which may indicate organisations are applying national complex guidance differently.
Conclusions
There is the potential for HRA processes to use more NHS resources than the research study itself when recruiting to a low-risk staff study across multiple organisations. There is a need to reduce unnecessary administrative burden and bureaucracy to give clinicians and research staff more opportunities to participate in research, and to free up NHS R&D departments, research nurses and clinicians to focus on more demanding and patient focused research studies. Hospices need standardised guidance on how to assess the risk of being involved in low-risk research without adopting the unnecessarily complex systems that are currently used within the NHS.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
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