Chapter 5 Introduction to Qualitative Research

Chapter 5

Introduction to
Qualitative Research

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What Is Qualitative Research?

Seeks to answer difficult “why” questions

Explanatory and descriptive

Discovery oriented; explanatory, descriptive, and inductive in nature; uses words rather than numbers to explain a phenomenon

Often used when just beginning to understand a phenomenon or if a new perspective is needed

Paradigm

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What Is Qualitative Research?

Phenomena studied in naturalistic settings

Attempts to interpret phenomena in terms of the meanings people bring to them

Used when attempting to understand the nature of a phenomenon

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Naturalistic Settings

The setting that people live in daily

Important because qualitative researchers consider the context to be very important in understanding a phenomenon

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Beliefs of Qualitative Researchers

There are multiple realities:

There are similarities and differences in every person’s experience.

Reality is socially constructed and context dependent:

Meaning of an observation is defined by its circumstance or context.

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Components of a Qualitative Research Report

Review of the literature

Similar to quantitative reports but usually there is less published literature available

May need to review studies with related or similar subjects, populations, or concepts

May wait to do the literature review until after study, but still need a basic review for justification

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Components of a Qualitative Research Report

Study design

Should be congruent with the philosophy of the qualitative researcher

May use a particular qualitative method or may follow the general tenets of qualitative research

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Components of a Qualitative Research Report

Sample

Usually a purposive sample (not random) because the researcher is looking for the particular person who can elucidate the phenomena being studied

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Components of a Qualitative Research Report

Description of the sample

Inclusion and exclusion criteria: description of characteristics a person must have to be selected or excluded from the study

Sample size: determined when data saturation occurs, that is, when information being shared with the researcher becomes repetitive

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Components of a Qualitative Research Report

Recruitment and data collection

Data: usually words, either an interview or a description

Duration: from when the participant contacts the researcher until the end of the study

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Components of a Qualitative Research Report

Description of the setting

Two possible descriptions: the place where recruitment occurred and the place where data collection occurred

Naturalistic setting

The setting is a rich source of data in qualitative research.

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Components of a Qualitative Research Report

Data collection

Contains details about how long the researcher spent collecting data

Description of how the researcher decided that data saturation had been reached

The kinds of questions that were asked

Grand tour questions

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Components of a Qualitative Research Report

Data analysis

How raw data were handled; usually transcripts of taped interviews

Goal: to find commonalities and differences, then group these into broader categories that capture the phenomena

Themes

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Components of a Qualitative Research Report

Discussion of results and implications for evidence-based practice

Usually describes a process, a set of conditions, or a description of an experience

Themes identified; process used to distinguish themes described

Quotes used to support themes

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Components of a Qualitative Research Report

Conclusions

Summarization of results

Similarities and differences with existing literature

New findings or conceptual conclusions

Suggest how to use the findings in practice or future research

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Kearney’s Categories of Qualitative Findings

Descriptive categories

Phenomenon vividly portrayed from a new perspective; provides a map into a human experience that previously was not well understood

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Kearney’s Categories of Qualitative Findings

Shared pathway or meaning

Synthesis of a shared experience or process; integration of concepts that provides a complex picture of a phenomenon

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Kearney’s Categories of Qualitative Findings

Depiction of experiential variation

Describes the main essence of an experience but also shows how the experience varies, depending on the individual or context

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Kearney’s Categories of Qualitative Findings

Dense explanatory description

Rich, situated understanding of a multifaceted and varied human phenomenon in a unique situation

Portrays the full range and depth of complex influences

Provides a densely woven structure to findings

Highest level of complexity and discovery

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How Can Nurses Use
Qualitative Evidence?

To understand experiences of patients

To assess the patient’s status or progress

To understand the range of responses from patients

To provide anticipatory guidance

To provide information helpful for coaching patients

To improve communication between nurses and patients

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Qualitative Research

Does NOT test interventions

Seeks to understand the patient’s experience

May provide information necessary to pursue quantitative studies

May be used for theory development or extension

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Which is the best naturalistic setting for studying parents’ food choices for their toddlers?

Grocery store

Home

Fast-food counter

Sit-down restaurant

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ANSWER: B

RATIONALE: Home would be the best choice, but patterns and habits may indicate the need to review choices in fast-food restaurants and convenience stores. A grocery store may be a good choice to indicate why certain foods were purchased to serve in the home.

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A nurse researcher completes a study and finds there is a need for continued research. What is the most appropriate response?

Realize the study has no value.

Continue the research to conclusion.

Stop the study until you have more time.

Document this in the report conclusion.

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ANSWER: D

RATIONALE: Document this in the report conclusion. At the end of the report is the conclusion. Here the researcher should summarize the results for the reader and should compare the findings to the existing literature. The author can also move into new extant findings or new conceptual conclusions here because the findings may have led into areas that were not anticipated at the beginning of the study. This is one of the great contributions of qualitative research: opening up new venues of discovery that were not previously anticipated. The researcher also makes suggestions regarding how to use the findings in practice and further directions for future research.

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Which statement made by a nurse indicates that more education on the clinical application of qualitative research is needed?

Results of qualitative research can be used to:

coach patients

test hypotheses

assess patient progress

provide anticipatory guidance

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Copyright © 2014, 2010, 2006, 2002, 1998, 1994, 1990, 1986 by Mosby, an imprint of Elsevier Inc.

ANSWER: B

RATIONALE: Qualitative research is not designed to test hypotheses or make predictions about causal effects. Answers A, C, and D are components of modes of clinical application of qualitative research. Option B relates to quantitative research.

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The first step in the qualitative research process is to do what?

Determine the study design

Plan recruitment process

Review the literature

Identify inclusion and exclusion criteria of the sample

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ANSWER: C

RATIONALE: The steps of the research process are review of literature, study design, sample, setting-recruitment, and data collection.

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