Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987)
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Nurses are preparing to join junior doctors on the picket line next week when the medics are due to stage a 48-hour strike against government plans to change their contracts.
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Nursing students are calling for a meeting with health secretary Jeremy Hunt as they step up their campaign to keep the nursing bursary.
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Last week saw the death of David Bowie coincide with the doctors' strike and protests against proposed cuts to nursing student bursaries.
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The need to obtain research ethical approval is common to all research involving human participants. This approval must be obtained before research participants can be approached and before data collection can begin. The process of ethical review is one way that research participants can be confident that possible risks have been considered, minimised and deemed acceptable. This article outlines some of the main issues researchers should consider when planning an application for research ethical approval by answering the following six questions: 'Do I need research ethical approval?', 'How many applications will I need to make?', 'Where should I apply for research ethical approval?', 'What do I need to include in my application?', 'What do research ethics committees look for?' and 'What other approvals might I need?' Answering these questions will enable researchers to navigate the ethical review process.