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Hi all,

Yes we have wording an clauses that are used routinely by ESRC researchers and their RECs. We have fair bit of training with Recs on consent and access.  Consent forms and access pathways are the no 1 issue that we answer questions on from ESRC applicants and award holders, almost on a weekly basis. 

Clauses need to suit the particular type of research design and the sample too, e.g. interviewing in the work places children, learning difficulties and NHS lists will all need different types of clauses.  We provide examples of forms for some specific cases based on real forms that have been successful within research. Feel free to link to these. We are also happy to come and train your REC on these issues.

http://ukdataservice.ac.uk/manage-data/legal-ethical/consent-data-sharing.aspx

Best,
Louise 
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Louise Corti
Director, Collections Development and Producer Relations
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New book: Corti, L., Van den Eynden, V., Bishop, L and Woollard, M. Managing and Sharing Research Data: A Guide to Good Practice. Sage Publications Ltd. http://www.uk.sagepub.com/books/9781446267264
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-----Original Message-----
From: Research Data Management discussion list [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Mary Donaldson
Sent: 14 April 2015 11:28
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: RDM Practice and Ethics approval?
Importance: High

Hi Andy and the list,

I've had an initial meeting with our REC and they are cautious about, but not hostile to, changing the consent wordings. They would like me to provide examples of wordings that would potentially allow data sharing (if agreeable to the participant). I've already found some examples from Bristol, but I'm interested  in the multi-clause type that you mentioned where participants could opt in or out of specific clauses. Would you be able to point me to an example of such a document?

Another issue that was raised was that the information sheet could become overly long and complicated when taking into account information on potential data sharing. Does anyone know of any example info sheets that succinctly convey information about the potential for data sharing and reuse?

Thanks,
Mary