Abstract

The International Council of Nurses (2012) and the Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences (2016) determined and published ethical standards relevant to nursing researchers and practitioners; based on these standards, nurses are expected to participate in committees where decisions on ethical issues are made. While clinical practitioners and nursing educators actively serve on research ethics committees, their precise role in these platforms has yet to be elucidated. In this study, medical, humanities/social science, lay, and nursing members in research ethics committees across Japan were invited to participate in a semi-structured interview; data were analyzed through a qualitative analysis method. Specifically, we interviewed 23 research ethics committee members in Japan to clarify the role of nursing members in the committee. Our qualitative analysis yielded six themes: share perspectives and experiences in nursing, protect research participants, evaluate the research design, represent the voice of research participants, confirm the informed consent documents and ascertain research participants' free will. The analyses revealed a slight difference between what other committee members expected of the role of nursing members and nursing members' recognition of their own role. Nursing members make an important and independent contribution to ethics committees on deliberations and decision-making regarding research ethics. Within the context of research ethics committees, member selection and training are essential issues, and this study contributes to the literature by showing how these topics relate to the role of the research ethics committees and of their members.

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