There is an international consensus that medical research involving humans should only be undertaken in accordance with ethical
principles. Paradoxically though, there is no consensus over the kinds of activities that constitute research and should be
subject to review. In the UK and elsewhere, research requiring review is distinguished from clinical audit. Unfortunately
the two activities are not always easy to differentiate from one another. Moreover, as the volume of audit increases and becomes
more formal in response to the demand for evidence-based practice in medicine, the overlap between research and audit grows
more acute. Arguably, similar ethical standards and systems for ensuring that those standards are met should be applied regardless
of whether or not a project is classified as research or audit. At a time when the research ethics review system in the UK
is undergoing significant reform it is important that the opportunity is not missed to address the longstanding research-audit
problem. We discuss suggestions for further reform that addresses this issue.
Keywords audit - research - ethics - publication ethics - ethics committees