Title: Qualitative research methods
1Qualitative research methods
2Objectives
- To define and distinguish qualitative (from
quantitative) methods - To provide examples of the use of qualitative
data in epidemiological research - To understand the unique contribution of
qualitative data - To introduce methods for collecting and analyzing
qualitative data - To understand some of the complexities in using
qualitative data
31. Definitions and characteristics
- More than methods, a new paradigm in social
research -
- The more precisely the position is determined,
the less precisely the momentum is known in this
instant, and vice versa. (Heisenberg, 1927) - What we observe is not Nature itself, but
Nature exposed to our method of questioning
(Heisenberg, 1958) - " O body swayed to music, O brightening glance,
How can we know the dancer from the dance ?
(W.B. Yeats, 1928)
41. Definitions and characteristics
- Origins in the Chicago School in the
1920s-30s - Rejection of the positivist paradigm and the
notion of an objective observer and an
unequivocal underlying truth - Attempting to represent reality as it is seen
from different perspectives
51. Definitions and characteristics
- Antirealist position
- Rejection of the idea of an unequivocal
underlying truth - Vs
- Subtle realism position
- Attempts to represent reality as it is seen from
different perspectives - Mays Pope 2005
61. Definitions and characteristics
- Implications for epidemiological researchers
- You may be part of, in fact may be constructing,
the phenomena you are measuring
71. Definitions and characteristics
- Qualitative research is
- A situated activity that locates the observer
in the world - Qualitative researchers
- Study things in their natural settings,
attempting to make sense of, or to interpret,
phenomena in terms of the meaning people bring to
them - Denzin Lincoln, 2000
81. Definitions and characteristics
- Qualitative methods
- Attempt to represent complex phenomena with
multiple variables operating simultaneously - Rather than isolating the independent effects of
single variables - Study phenomena as they occur naturally
- without trying to hold factors constant or
control confounding factors
91. Definitions and characteristics
- Sub-paradigms of qualitative research
- Constructivist aims for understanding,
reconstruction of actors perspective - Examples grounded theory, ethnography, social
constructivism, interpretive anthropology - Critical aims are social transformation,
restitution, emancipation - Examples feminist, neomarxist, critical race
theory, queer theory, postcolonial theory
101. Definitions and characteristics
- The critical paradigm is finding a place in
public health/epidemiology
11Critical Public Health, Volume 14, Number 3 /
September 2004
- 'We've been trained to put up with it' real
women and the menopauseMargaret E. Morris A1
and Anthea Symonds - Abstract
- This paper, based on qualitative research among
a group of women in South Wales, looks at the
meanings they give to the menopause, its effects
on their working and family lives and the support
currently offered by medicine and health
promotion. This study is set against a wider
discussion of the medicalization of the
menopause, and the organization of work within
which the current generation of women are
situated. It also argues for a new public health
approach including the adoption of more
qualitative research techniques that would
address the concerns and beliefs of people rather
than following the traditional 'objective'
epidemiological model. The paper concludes that
the present generation of women do not share a
negative view of the menopause but are struggling
against mixed messages from their own cultural
background, from promotion of medicalized
'solutions' and from contemporary pressures of
work.
12Qualitative paradigms contrasted
Based on Guba Lincoln, 1994.
13Qualitative and quantitative paradigms contrasted
Based on Green, 1988.
142. Uses of qualitative methods
- Two main approaches in health research to date
- Enhancement model
- Sees qualitative methods to be complementary
(subsidiary to?) - Difference model
- Qualitative research contributes to evidence
bases in its own right
15Uses of qualitative methods
- Qualitative methods are used for
- Assisting understanding of why interventions do
or do not work - Improving the accuracy and relevance of standard
quantitative approaches - i.e., getting inside the black box
- PRE MEASURE POST
MEASURE - PRE MEASURE POST
MEASURE
PROGRAM
16- E.g.
- POP Santé
- Healthy alcohol consumption intervention
evaluation
17- Developing quantitative measures that fully
capture the phenomena of interest - e.g. study of teens qualitative experience of
nicotine dependence - Finding unanticipated effects
- Unstated objectives and issues
- Generating hypotheses to be tested quantitatively
18When and when not to usequalitative approaches
- When
- rich contextualized description is needed
- variations in intervention implementation or
process are to be assessed - new or refined program theory is needed
- When not
- causal attribution of intervention effects is
required - incremental effects are to be isolated
- resource expenditures are to be assessed
193. Qualitative methods
- Data collection methods that are
- Open-ended - do not pre-define
- Response choices
- Samples
- Inclusive of all possible variables
20Qualitative vs quantitative data gathering
- Qualitative and quantitative data gathering are
distinguished by several basic features - Quantitative
- relatively large number of cases
- highly structured and uniform
- minimum of coding
- captures only a limited number of variables of
interest - Qualitative
- less structured
- significant variation among elements
- smaller number of respondents
- captures the entire field, not only a few
isolated variables - requires coding
213. Qualitative methods
- 1. Unstructured or semistructured interviews
- List of questions, based on research questions
- Interview flows like a conversation
- Question wording and order may vary
- (But standardization helps interviewers reduce
bias) - Interviews are transcribed or summarized
223. Qualitative methods
- 2. Group interviews focus groups
- Semi-structured interviews with 6-10 people
- Using
- Interview guide
- Facilitation techniques
- Group is unit of analysis
- Sessions are transcribed or summarized
- Other group techniques nominal, delphi
233. Qualitative methods
- 3. Observation
- Using a semi-structured template
- Participant observation
- Observer becomes part of the scene
- 4. Others
- Photovoice
- E.g. CAPC evaluaiton
- Journaling
- POP Santé
- Stories, life histories, narratives
- Montréal-North
24- 5. Case studies
- Structured cross-case comparisons
- E.g. Major Collaborative Research Initiatives
program evaluation SSHRC - http//www.sshrc.ca/web/about/publications/mcri_pe
rformance_e.pdf
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263. Qualitative methods
- Qualitative sampling
- Purposive intended to deliberately include
meaningful cases - Including disconfirming cases
- Progressive
- Can be defined as the study progresses
- Open
- Stops when saturation is reached
273. Qualitative methods
- Quantitative vs qualitative data
- Qualitative data is usually some form of text,
words - Transcription
- Interview notes
- Observation notes
- Can also be visual data
- Drawings
- Photos
- Film/video
28Quantitative vs qualitative data
- Must be organized, analyzed and interpreted to
derive (induce) their meaning - Unlike quantitative data, where meaning is
predetermined - Quantitative data as convenient (?) summaries of
qualities eg. age
294. Qualitative data analyses
- Involves inductive identification of categories
of meaning and relationships among the categories
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314. Qualitative data analyses
- Main types
- Constructivist identification of emergent
themes based on patterns of responses - E.g. ABC organization evaluation
324. Qualitative data analyses
- Qualitative data analysis software
- NVIVO (NU-Dist)
- Atlas
- Example street girls focus groups (Haley et al)
- Positive association between contraception use
and pregnancy
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364. Qualitative data analyses
- Matrix
- Classsification of content into cells of a matrix
defined by analysis dimensions - Identification of patterns in across rows and
columns - E.g. Motor vehicle deaths
374. Qualitative data analyses
- Content analysis
- formal counts of word frequency that can be
treated quantitatively
384. Qualitative data analyses
- What does the word epidemiology evoke for
you? - Write down the first three words that come to
your mind.
39Santropol Roulants analysis
405. Advantages and disadvantages of qualitative
methods
- Pros
- Much deeper appreciation of phenomena under study
- Many relate more easily to it than quantitative
approaches - Cons
- Often seen as soft, no substitute for controlled
studies - Data collection and analysis is more costly and
time consuming
415. Advantages and disadvantages data collection
and analysis
426. Mixing qualitative and quantitative methods
- Many studies and evaluations in public health now
combine qualitative and quantitative methods - Aiming for triangulation cross-validating
results by comparing findings on the same
question from multiple sources, methods - convergent results provide reassurance about the
credibility and trustworthiness of the results - divergent results must be explained
43Examples
- Evaluation of a diabetes prevention program for
primary schools (Heart and Stroke Foundation of
Québec) - Quantitative pre-post design with control group
measuring teacher-rated impacts on childrens
knowledge and behaviour - Qualitative semi-structured interviews with
principal, focus groups with teachers and
students observation of teacher training
447. Quality in qualitative research
- Questions to ask regarding the quality of
qualitative measurement and analysis - Sampling
- Did the sample include the full range of possible
cases or settings so that conceptual rather than
statistical generalizations could be made (that
is, more than convenience sampling?) - If appropriate, were efforts made to obtain data
that might contradict the or modify the analysis
by extending the sample (for example, to a
different type of area)?.
457. Quality in qualitative research
- Data collection and analysis
- Were the data collection and analysis procedures
systematic? - Was an audit trail provided such that someone
else could repeat each stage, including the
analysis? - How well did the analysis succeed in
incorporating all the observations? - To what extent did the analysis develop concepts
and categories capable of explaining key
processes or respondents accounts or
observations? - Was it possible to follow the iteration between
data and the explanations for the data? - Did the researcher search for disconfirming cases?
467. Quality in qualitative research
- Reflexivity of the account
- Did the researcher self-consciously assess the
likely impact of the methods used on the data
obtained? - Were sufficient data included in the reports of
the study to provide sufficient evidence for
readers to assess whether analytical criteria had
been met?
477. Quality in qualitative research
- Correspondences between paradigms
- Reliability reproducibility
- Validity credibility, trustworthiness
- Generalizability not relevant
48- Recommended reading
- Patton MQ (2002) Qualitative research and
evaluation methods (3rd ed.). Thousand Oakes,
CASage Publications, Inc. - Miles M., and Huberman, M. (1994). Qualitative
Data Analysis An Expanded Sourcebook. Thousand
Oaks, CA Sage