Title: Searching For Qualitative Evidence
1Searching For Qualitative Evidence
2Learning Outcomes
- Describe the particular challenges inherent in
identifying qualitative research - Apply appropriate tools to focus a qualitative
question - Identify key terms to assist retrieval of
qualitative research - Demonstrate an awareness of search filters for
qualitative research
3Todays Session
- A game of two halves
- Constructing a search strategy and sources of
evidence - Filters and other techniques
4Part One Search strategies and sources
- Whats different about searching for Qualitative
Research? - Tools for focussing your question
- Sources of Qualitative Research
- Case study worked search example
- Practical Sifting Abstracts Exercise
5Qualitative Research
- Qualitative research seeks to understand and
interpret personal experiences, behaviours,
interactions, and social contexts to explain the
phenomena of interest, such as the attitudes,
beliefs, and perspectives of patients and
clinicians the interpersonal nature of caregiver
and patient relationships the illness
experience or the impact of human suffering.
(Wong et al, 2004)
6Qualitative Research
- Research that derives data from observation,
interviews, or verbal interactions and focuses on
the meanings and interpretations of the
participants (From Holloway and Wheeler, "Ethical
issues in qualitative nursing research," Nursing
Ethics, 1995 Sep 2(3) 223-232).Year
introduced 2003 - MeSH
7What do I need to consider?
- Qualitative research is small part of the
research literature - The indexing in databases is inconsistent and
variable - Qualitative studies sometimes have creative
titles or inadequate abstracts - Medline might not be your preferred resource.
- If searching in limited databases try MEDLINE and
CINAHL
8Focussing Qualitative Questions
9Applying question tools to your search
formulation
- Health services research uses
- PATIENT-INTERVENTION-COMPARISON-OUTCOME (PICO)
structure - Within social sciences research SPICE may be more
appropriate - SETTING
- PERSPECTIVE
- INTERVENTION / EXPOSURE / INTEREST
- COMPARISON
- EVALUATION
10An example of SPICE Actual Example
- SETTING Awaiting Surgery
- PERSPECTIVE Patients
- INTERVENTION - Coronary Artery Bypass Graft
Surgery - COMPARISON None
- EVALUATION Uncertainty and Anxiety
11Another example of SPICE
- SETTING Primary Care
- PERSPECTIVE Patients with Diabetes
- INTERVENTION Good Blood Pressure Control
- COMPARISON None
- EVALUATION Attitudes
12Try and put this question into the SPICE Framework
- What is the impact of childhood cancer on their
parents in terms of their quality of life in the
home? - Setting
- Perspective
- Intervention/Exposure
- Comparison
- Evaluation
13An alternative - ProPheT!
- Problem First time mothers
- Phenomenon of Interest Attitudes to
Breastfeeding - Time Within first six months of birth
14Exercise Use the SPICE or ProPheT framework to
formulate your own research question
15Feedback from Exercise One
16Sources of Qualitative Research
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18Sources of Qualitative Research - 1
- Journal Articles
- ASSIA
- British Nursing Index
- CINAHL
- ERIC
- MEDLINE
- Social Science Citation Index
- Sociological Abstracts
19Sources of Qualitative Research - 2
- Dissertations
- Dissertation Abstracts
- Index to Theses
- CINAHL
- Books and Book Chapters
- British Library OPAC
- COPAC
- Specialist Library Collections
20Case Study
- You are working on an ESRC funded project looking
at the benefits of a doula (a woman experienced
in childbirth who provides continuous physical,
emotional, and informational support to the
mother before, during and just after childbirth)
for low-income mothers.
21Our example of SPICE
- SETTING the Developed World (with comparable
health systems to the UK) - PERSPECTIVE Low-income mothers
- INTERVENTION Doula (Lay support)
- COMPARISON Professional support or No Support
- EVALUATION Perceived levels of social support,
birth outcomes, levels of breastfeeding etc.
22Example of Search Strategy in Cinahl
23Example of Search Strategy in Cinahl
24Subject headings
25Identifying Qualitative Research - Terminology
- Generic terms e.g. qualitative plus
- Exploratory Methods Focus group, Grounded
theory, Action Research, Content analysis,
Thematic analysis - Software Nudist or NVivo
- Citations Glaser Strauss
- Application Ethnology, Psychology
- Phenomenon Perceptions, Attitudes, User Views,
Standpoint, Viewpoint - Approaches Ethnographic
- Data Stories, Narratives, Descriptions, Themes,
Findings - Experiences Encounters, Experiences
26Exercise Identifying Qualitative Research from
Abstracts
- Using the handout provided consider the six
references taken from Cinahl or Medline. - For each references mark all the words or phrases
that identify the item as qualitative research.
27Feedback from Exercise Two
28Recap on the session so far
- Challenges in searching for qualitative research
- Sources
- Tools to help with your question
- Case Study
- Keywords and subject headings to consider
29Part Two Search Filters and other search
techniques
- Methodological filters
- Using a key citation to identify research
- Using the web to find research
30What is a methodological filter?
- A hedge or filter is a standardised search
strategy that is designed to be used in
conjunction with a subject search to retrieve
valid studies from the (primary) medical
literature. - Filters work in one of two ways
- by identifying particular publication types or
study designs most likely to answer a question - by isolating subject or free-text terms most
likely to be associated with high-quality studies
31How do they work?
- Filters come from 3 different sources-
- Subject heading
- Keyword
- Publication type
32How do I use a methodological filter?
- Step One Carry out a subject search as usual
using subject headings and/or free text - Step Two Apply methodological filter appropriate
to question you are asking - One-line filter
- Maximum sensitivity filter
- Maximum specificity filter
- Mid-range filter
33For today, some one-liners ...
- MeSH Heading
- e.g. Qualitative Research Medline 2003-
- Keyword
- Findings
- Publication Type
- Research CINAHL only
34Methodological filters 1
- MEDLINE
- Nursing-Methodology-Research.DE.
- qualitative ADJ research
- grounded ADJ theory
- ethnograph
- 1 or 2 or 3 or 4
Marks S. Qualitative Studies. In McKibbon A,
editor. PDQ Evidence-Based Principles and
Practice. 1st ed. Hamilton B.C. Decker, Inc.
1999. pp 187-204
35Methodological filters 2
- qualitative
- findings
- interview
- interviews.DE.
- 1 OR 2 OR 3 OR 4
Grant MJ. How does your searching grow? A survey
of search preferences and the use of optimal
search strategies in the identification of
qualitative research. Health Info Libr J. 2004
Mar 21(1)21-32.
36Methodological filters 3
Sensitivity-maximising filter interview or
px.fs. or health-services-administration.DE.
Specificity-maximising filter qualitative or
themes
Optimised filter interview.TI. or interview.AB.
or interview.DE. or experience.TI. or
experience.AB. or experience.DE. or qualitative
Adapted from Wong SS, Wilczynski NL, Haynes RB.
Developing Optimal Search Strategies for
Detecting Clinically Relevant Qualitative Studies
in MEDLINE. Medinfo. 2004 2004311-6.
37Definitions
- Sensitivity the ability of a search strategy to
identify relevant records - Specificity the ability of a search strategy to
exclude irrelevant records
Spring M. (2008). Applying the principles of EBM
to public health searching for public health
evidence the experience at the National
Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence
(NICE). Eahil conference, Held on 23-28 June,
Helsinki, Finland.
38Methodological filters 4 Ovid MEDLINE
- Best Sensitivity
- interview.tw. OR px.fs. OR exp health services
administration - Best Sensitivity Small decrease in Sensitivity
with large increase in Specificity - interview.mp. OR px.fs. OR qualitative.tw.
- Best Specificity
- qualitative.tw. OR themes.tw.
- Best Specificity Small decrease in Specificity
with large increase pin Sensitivity - interviews.mp, t. OR qualitative.mp. OR
experiences.tw. - Best Optimization of Sensitivity and Specificity
- interview.mp. OR experience.mp. OR
qualitative.tw.
39Methodological filters - 5
- Dont forget MeSH heading Qualitative Research
- Introduced in 2003, so coverage is limited
- But you can combine it with one of the previous
filters by using the OR operator
40Methodological filters - 5
- Best sensitivity exp interviews
- Best specificity audiorecording.sh.
- Best optimization of sensitivity and specificity
exp study design - Wilczynski NL, Marks S, Haynes RB. Search
strategies for identifying qualitative studies in
CINAHL. Qual Health Res. 2007 May17(5)705-10.
41 Methodological Filters 6 EMBASE
- Best Sensitivity (Single term)
- interview.mp.
- Best Sensitivity (Combination)
- interview.mp. OR qualitative.tw. OR exp health
care organization - Best Specificity (Single term)
- qualitative.tw.
- Best Specificity (Combination)
- qualitative.tw. Or qualitative study.tw.
- Best Optimization of Sensitivity and Specificity
(Single) - exp health care facilities and services
- Best Optimization of Sensitivity and Specificity
(Combination) - interview.tw. OR exp health care organization OR
experiences.tw.
42So how does this work in practice?
- You are conducting a systematic review to examine
the lack of support available for the husbands of
women who have been diagnosed with breast cancer. - The review commissioners want to answer what
counselling and support services should be
offered in response to the husbands needs? - You start by searching Medline for published
accounts of the husbands attitudes to their
wives disease.
Example 1
43SPICE breakdown
- You break search down into following components
- Setting Primary and Community Care
- Perspective Husbands
- Intervention/
- Exposure Wife with breast cancer
- Comparison Perhaps the needs of the
- wives themselves
- Evaluation Attitudes
Example 1 continued
44Mapping to Subject Headings
- Match SPICE components to relevant MeSH or other
headings (if any) - Setting Primary-Health-Care
- Perspective Spouses
- Exposure Breast-Neoplasms
- Comparison ???
- Evaluation Attitude-To-Health
Example 1 continued
45Search strategy
- husband OR Spouses.W..DE.
- 1 AND Breast-Neoplasms.DE.
- 2 AND (qualitative OR interview OR findings OR
Interviews.W..DE. OR Attitude-To-Health.DE.)
Note that in line 3 we have used Grants filter
Example 1 continued
46Citation Searching
We identify a key methodological or subject text
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51Using the Web to Identify Qualitative Research
52Google Scholar (scholar.google.com)
53Scirus http//www.scirus.com/
54Scirus
55Research from Flemming Briggs (2007)
- Findings showed that a simple search strategy
(broad-based terms - 3 search terms) was as
effective as a complex one (free text - 48 search
terms) in locating qualitative research on
patients experiences of living with a leg ulcer. - It may be feasible to restrict searches with a
clear nursing focus to the CINAHL bibliographic
database. - Replication of findings with other nursing topics
is required.
56Learning Outcomes
- Describe the particular challenges inherent in
identifying qualitative research - Apply appropriate tools to focus a qualitative
question - Identify key terms to assist retrieval of
qualitative research - Demonstrate an awareness of search filters for
qualitative research
57References - 1
- Flemming K, Briggs M. Electronic searching to
locate qualitative research evaluation of three
strategies. J Adv Nurs. 2007 Jan57(1)95-100. - Grant MJ. How does your searching grow? A survey
of search preferences and the use of optimal
search strategies in the identification of
qualitative research. Health Info Libr J. 2004
Mar 21(1)21-32 - Marks S. Qualitative studies. In McKibbon A,
Eady A and Marks S. PDQ evidence-based principles
and practice . Hamilton, Canada BC Decker Inc.,
1999.
58References - 2
- Spring M. (2008). Applying the principles of EBM
to public health searching for public health
evidence the experience at the National
Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence
(NICE). Eahil conference, Held on 23-28 June,
Helsinki, Finland - Wilczynski NL, Marks S, Haynes RB. Search
strategies for identifying qualitative studies in
CINAHL. Qual Health Res. 2007 May17(5)705-10. - Wong SSL, Wilczynski NL, Haynes RB. Developing
optimal search strategies for detecting
clinically relevant qualitative studies in
Medline. Medinfo 2004311-314.