HC Deb 20 January 1992 vol 202 c80W
Mrs. Wise

To ask the Secretary of State for Health if he will make it his policy to require ethics committees to maintain long-term storage of the records of people involved in scientific clinical trials to enable long-term follow up to be carried out if it later emerges that this should be done to check for an unexpected long-term, or slow to develop, after-effect.

Mr. Dorrell

Research ethics committees have no powers to gain access to or require the long-term storage of the records of people involved in scientific clinical trials. Hospitals are currently required to keep the medical records of all patients, including those involved in trials, for a minimum of eight years after the end of treatment. In addition, a recent EC directive (91/507/EC, adopted on 19 July 1991 and shortly to be implemented in the UK) requires the person responsible for marketing a medicinal product to keep codes, identifying patients involved in the trial, for a minimum of 15 years. This additional requirement should further facilitate the identification of clinical trial subjects.

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