Cover: Qualitative Research in Health Care, Fourth Edition by Catherine Pope and Nicholas Mays

Qualitative Research in Health Care

Fourth Edition

Edited by

Catherine Pope

Professor of Medical Sociology
Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences
University of Oxford
Oxford, UK

Nicholas Mays

Professor of Health Policy
Department of Health Services Research and Policy
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
London, UK




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Preface to the Fourth Edition

We had no idea in 1996 that, more than two decades later, we would be embarking on a fourth edition of this book. When we wrote the original paper [1] which inspired the book, qualitative methods were largely unfamiliar to health professionals and many health care researchers. Indeed, there was indifference and even hostility in some circles to the use of qualitative methods in research on health care. The paper that led to the book had been based on a quirky dramatic conference presentation to the Society for Social Medicine's annual scientific meeting in the form of a Socratic dialogue between a young female qualitative health services researcher and her older, male, medically trained boss. Crudely, the question the dialogue explored was: ‘Why don't medics take qualitative research methods seriously?’ The intervening years have seen a huge expansion in the use of these methods in health care research and elsewhere. For example, the place of qualitative research is now sufficiently recognised at the highest level in government to merit the commissioning, by the UK Cabinet Office, of a guide for civil servants and researchers on how to assess the quality of qualitative policy evaluations [2].

Following the publication of the initial Socratic dialogue, we were fortunate that Richard Smith, the sympathetic then editor of the British Medical Journal, accepted our proposal for a series of papers targeted largely at clinicians, introducing them very succinctly to the main methods used in qualitative research in health care. This series became the first edition. The book has since become international – having been translated into Japanese and Portuguese [3, 4] – and we find that its readership now includes health care professionals working in many different health systems, researchers from diverse disciplinary backgrounds, and policy‐makers and research funders from across the globe. This book is also now one of several on the application of qualitative research to health care, but we believe that it remains distinctive as an entry point for those with little or no previous knowledge of qualitative methods.

For the fourth edition, we have updated the existing material, incorporating new examples and references, and added new chapters on topics which we see as increasingly relevant in an introductory text. As well as continuing to introduce the core qualitative methods of interviews and observation, the book includes entirely new chapters covering the analysis of documents and visual artefacts, and of virtual and digital data, which are becoming more widely used in the health research field. Also new to this edition is a chapter on the role of theory in qualitative research, which we have added in response to requests from readers and students anxious to understand the intellectual foundations of qualitative research. Looking back at previous editions of this book, we feel that we avoided or minimised attention to debates about theory and philosophy in a way that suggested they were irrelevant to qualitative research in health care. In this edition, we recognise the importance of theory in qualitative research more explicitly. We view theory as the foundation of what we do, and, like the physical foundations of a building, while the structures may not be immediately visible, they support what we do as researchers. This book also examines the interface between qualitative and quantitative research – in primary ‘mixed method’ studies and case study research, and in qualitative secondary analysis and evidence synthesis.

Preparing this fourth edition took a lot longer than we had anticipated, in part because as editors we have reached a stage of life characterised by significant caring responsibilities, notably for relatives who need formal health and social care, and informal support. Our interactions with the health and social care services in this period have sharpened our belief that the methods and approaches described in this book are needed to understand health care and health services, and will be essential if we are to improve these. We owe a debt of thanks to all the authors for contributing to this new edition, and to them and our publishers for their patience with the elongated editing process.

As before, this book has been improved by the constructive advice, commentary, and expertise of colleagues and students, readers, and reviewers. Other researchers have made our job easier by opening up and contributing to debates about methodology and research quality, and by simply doing the kinds of qualitative research which we refer to in this book. We are grateful to the team at Wiley: Pri Gibbons and Deirdre Barry in Oxford, and, in particular, our Project Editor, Yoga Mohanakrishnan and Production Editor, Bhavya Boopathi in India.

Catherine Pope and Nicholas Mays, August 2019

References

  1. 1 Pope, C. and Mays, N. (1993). Opening the black box: an encounter in the corridors of health services research. BMJ 306: 315–318.
  2. 2 Spencer, L., Ritchie, J., Lewis, J., and Dillon, L. (2003). Quality in Qualitative Evaluation: A Framework for Assessing Research Evidence. London: Government Chief Social Researcher's Office, Prime Minister's Strategy Unit, Cabinet Office. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/government‐social‐research‐framework‐for‐assessing‐research‐evidence (accessed 15 September 2019).
  3. 3 Pope, C. and Mays, N. (2001). Qualitative Research in Health Care. Tokyo: Ikakju‐Shoin Ltd.
  4. 4 Pope, C. and Mays, N. (2005). Pesquisa qualitative an atenção à saúde (trans. A.P. Fajardo). Porto Alegra: Artmed.

List of Contributors

Davina Allen

School of Healthcare Sciences
Cardiff University
Cardiff, UK

Rebecca K. Barnes

Centre for Academic Primary Care
University of Bristol
Bristol, UK

Nicky Britten

College of Medicine and Health
University of Exeter
Exeter, UK

Alec Fraser

King’s Business School
King’s College London
London, UK

Dawn Goodwin

Lancaster Medical School
Lancaster University
Lancaster, UK

Martin Gorsky

Centre for History in Public Health
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
London, UK

Lisa Hinton

Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences
University of Oxford
Oxford, UK

Bodil J. Landstad

Department of Health Sciences
Mid Sweden University
Sundsvall, Sweden

Geraldine M. Leydon

Faculty of Medicine
University of Southampton
Southampton, UK

Kath Maguire

College of Medicine and Health
University of Exeter
Exeter, UK

Nicholas Mays

Department of Health Services Research and Policy
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
London, UK

Alex Mold

Centre for History in Public Health
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
London, UK

Alicia O’Cathain

School of Health and Related Research
University of Sheffield
Sheffield, UK

Catherine Pope

Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences
University of Oxford
Oxford, UK

John Powell

Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences
University of Oxford
Oxford, UK

Sara Ryan

Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences
University of Oxford
Oxford, UK

Jonathan Q. Tritter

School of Languages and Social Sciences
Aston University
Birmingham, UK

Michelle H. van Velthoven

Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences
University of Oxford
Oxford, UK

Sue Ziebland

Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences
University of Oxford
Oxford, UK

1
Introduction

Nicholas Mays1 and Catherine Pope2

1 Department of Health Services Research and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK

2 Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

Qualitative research is used in a range of social science disciplines. It encompasses a range of methods for data collection and analysis that are used in both academic and market research, several of which have become familiar in health care and health services research. This book aims to introduce the main qualitative methods that can be used to study health care, and to argue that qualitative research can be employed appropriately and fruitfully to answer complex questions confronting researchers. These questions might include those directed to finding out about patients' experiences of health care and everyday health care practices or evaluating organisational change processes and quality improvement.

1.1 What Is Qualitative Research?

Qualitative research is often defined by reference to quantitative research. It is seen as a way of doing research ‘without counting’ because it does not set out to quantify or enumerate the social world or phenomena studied. Indeed, the origins of this book lie in a series of articles on non‐quantitative methods directed at a medical journal audience. However, defining qualitative research as ‘not quantitative’ is unhelpful. It risks suggesting that because qualitative research does not seek to measure, it cannot help to explain or understand social phenomena. Whilst it is true that qualitative research generally deals with speech, actions, and texts rather than numbers, this does not mean that it is devoid of measurement or explanatory power. It is worth noting that it is both feasible and legitimate to analyse certain types of qualitative data quantitatively (see Chapter 9 on the analysis of qualitative data). Moreover, qualitative analysis can offer profound and rich insights about aspects of health care and services that prove elusive to quantitative research, as pointed out in a letter to the British Medical Journal on the contribution of qualitative health care research:

Qualitative studies help us understand why promising clinical interventions do not always work in the real world, how patients experience care, and how practitioners think. They also explore and explain the complex relations between the healthcare system and the outside world, such as the socio‐political context in which healthcare is regulated, funded, and provided, and the ways in which clinicians and regulators interact with industry. [1]

Qualitative research is variously referred to as an approach or set of approaches, as a practice, or as a paradigm. We describe qualitative research as an interpretative approach to data collection and analysis that is concerned with the meanings people attach to their experiences of the social world and how people make sense of that world. Qualitative research comprises both qualitative methods of data collection and qualitative methods of analysis; it gathers words and/or visual, descriptive forms of data and explicates these using text‐based, interpretative analytical methods.

Qualitative research tries to interpret social phenomena such as interactions, behaviours, and communications in terms of the meanings people bring to them. If quantitative research asks questions such as ‘how big is X or how many Xs are there?’, qualitative research tackles questions such as ‘what is X, and how do people's perceptions of X vary in different circumstances, and why?’ In this respect the ‘measurement’ that takes place in qualitative research is often concerned with taxonomy or classification rather than enumeration. This interpretive focus means that the researcher frequently has to question common sense and assumptions or taken‐for‐granted ideas about the social world. Bauman, talking about sociology in general, refers to this as ‘defamiliarising’ and this is exactly what good qualitative research tries to do [2]. Rather than simply accepting the taken‐for‐granted concepts and explanations used in everyday life, qualitative research asks fundamental and searching questions about the nature of social phenomena. So, for example, instead of counting the number of suicides, which presumes that we already agree on the nature of suicide, the qualitative researcher may well start by asking, ‘what is suicide and how is it defined in this society?’ and go on to show that it is socially ‘constructed’ by the activities of coroners, legal experts, health professionals, and individuals, so that definitions of suicide and its connotations vary considerably between different countries, different cultures and religious groups, and across time [3, 4]. These insights, in turn, have profound implications for any attempt to quantify levels or trends in suicide or to intervene to reduce the number of suicides.

A second distinguishing feature of qualitative research, and one of its key strengths, is that it is particularly suited to studying people in their day‐to‐day settings rather than in artificial or experimental ones (though, as Chapter 12 shows, qualitative methods can be used fruitfully even as part of experimental studies such as randomised controlled trials). Kirk and Miller define qualitative research as a ‘particular tradition in social science that fundamentally depends on watching people in their own territory, and interacting with them in their own language, on their own terms’ [5]. This is referred to as naturalism – hence the term ‘naturalistic methods’, which is sometimes used to denote the approach used in much, but not all, qualitative research.

Another feature of qualitative research (which some authors emphasise) is that it often employs several different qualitative methods of data collection. Studying people in their own territory can thus entail observing (non‐participant observation), joining in (participant observation), and talking to people (interviews, focus groups, and informal chatting). It might also include reading what they have written (documentary analysis) and examining objects, images and artefacts they create or use. Different qualitative methods can be combined to provide deeper insights; for example, a recent doctoral thesis used photographs to explore a health care setting augmented by interviews and focus groups [6]. Another study interrogated a range of different documents and used interviews to understand health policy [7], and elsewhere observation and interviews have been used together to examine the implementation of a major quality improvement initiative [8], and to identify the barriers to innovation in health care organisations [9].

1.2 The Uses of Qualitative Research

As well as combining several qualitative methods in a single study, quantitative and qualitative approaches can be used to complement each other. (This is explored in more detail in Chapter 12.) One simple way this can be achieved is by using qualitative research as the preliminary to quantitative research. This model is likely to be the most familiar to those engaged in health and health services research. For example, qualitative research can be used to classify phenomena, or answer the ‘what is X?’ question, which necessarily precedes the process of enumeration of Xs. As health care deals with people, and as people are, on the whole, more complex than the subjects of the natural sciences, there is a whole set of such questions about human interaction, and how people interpret interaction, to which health professionals and researchers may need answers before attempting to quantify behaviours or events. At their most basic, qualitative research techniques can be used simply to discover the most comprehensible terms or words in common use to describe an activity which can be included in a subsequent survey questionnaire. An excellent example of this can be found in the preliminary work undertaken for the British national survey of sexual attitudes and lifestyles [10]. In this case, face‐to‐face interviews were used to uncover popular ambiguities and misunderstandings in the use of a number of terms such as ‘vaginal sex’, ‘oral sex’, ‘penetrative sex’, and ‘heterosexual’. This qualitative work had enormous value in informing the development of the subsequent survey questionnaire, and in ensuring the validity of the data obtained, because the language in the questionnaire was clear and could be widely understood. This sense checking and foundational qualitative work is increasingly used in studies of complex health care interventions both to inform the development of the intervention itself and to design the evaluation. An example of qualitative work that contributed to both these aspects is Segar et al.'s careful interview and observational work that informed the development of two telehealth interventions to support patients with long‐term conditions [11], and which also contributed to the development of a conceptual framework that underpinned the randomised controlled trials used to evaluate these interventions in the Healthlines study [12].

Qualitative research is not only useful as the prelude to quantitative research. It also has a role to play in ‘validating’ quantitative research or in providing a different perspective on the same social phenomena studied quantitatively. Sometimes, it can force a major reinterpretation of quantitative data. For example, one anthropological study using qualitative methods uncovered the severe limitations of previous surveys: Stone and Campbell found that cultural traditions and unfamiliarity with questionnaires had led Nepalese villagers to feign ignorance of abortion and family planning services, and to under‐report their use of contraception and abortion when responding to surveys [13]. More often, the insights provided by qualitative research help to interpret or understand quantitative data more fully. Thus Bloor's work on the surgical decision‐making process built on an epidemiological study of the widespread variation in rates of common surgical procedures [14] (see Box 1.1) and helped to unpack the reasons why these variations occurred [15]. In the Healthlines study described earlier, qualitative research was used to explain the modest effects achieved in the randomised controlled trials of the telehealth interventions [16].

Qualitative methods can also be used independently to uncover social processes, or access areas of social life which are not open or amenable to quantitative research. They are especially valuable for understanding views and opinions. For example, Morgan and Watkin's research on people's cultural beliefs about hypertension has helped to explain why rates of compliance with prescribed medications vary significantly among and between white and Afro‐Caribbean patients in South London [17]. Qualitative research can also provide rich detail about life and behaviours inside health care settings, as in Strong's classic observational study showing how American and English hospital clinics were organised [18]. Stand‐alone qualitative research has also been useful in examining how data about health and health care are shaped by the social processes that produce them – from waiting lists [19], to death certificates [20], and AIDS case registrations [21]. Qualitative methods are increasingly being used in studies of health service organisation and policy to considerable effect in evaluating organisational reforms and changes to health service provision [22].

1.3 Methods Used in Qualitative Research

We have suggested that qualitative research explores people's subjective understandings of their everyday lives. Although the different social science disciplines use qualitative methods in slightly different ways to accomplish this, broadly speaking, the methods used in qualitative research include observation, interviews, and the analysis of texts, documents, or artefacts. Speech or behaviour can be collected using audio or video tapes, and with the advent of the Web and mobile communication technologies a range of additional digital data capture opportunities have opened up, extending textual analysis to include online conversations and forum threads as well as printed documents. Data collected by each method may be used differently (for example, video‐ and/or audio‐taped material may be used in conversational analysis (see Chapter 10) or as the basis of one of the other distinctive analytical approaches (outlined in Chapter 9)), but there is a common focus on talk and action rather than numbers. On one level, these ‘methods’ are used every day by human beings to make sense of the world – we watch what is going on, ask questions of each other, and try to comprehend the social world we live in. The key difference between this activity and the qualitative methods employed in social science is that the latter are explicit and systematic. Qualitative research, therefore, involves the application of logical, planned, and thorough methods of collecting data, and careful, thoughtful analysis. As commentators have pointed out, considerable skill is required by the researcher to progress beyond superficial description towards genuine insights into behaviour [23–25]. Perhaps more than some quantitative research techniques, qualitative research studies benefit from experienced researchers. One of the problems arising from the rapid expansion of qualitative methods in the medical and health fields is that the necessary skill and experience are sometimes lacking to undertake high‐quality qualitative work.

1.4 The Place of Qualitative Methods in Health Care Research

Over the past few decades, the usefulness and contribution of qualitative research in and for health care has appeared to become increasingly accepted. The British Medical Journal series that prompted the first edition of this book was highly cited and has been augmented and expanded with further papers. The range of books detailing the application of these methods to health and social care practice and research has grown, as has the number of published studies. In the UK, the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment Programme, previously dominated by quantitative and experimental methods, began to encourage qualitative and mixed methods research, as did the International Cochrane Collaboration in relation to systematic reviews. Likewise, the UK Medical Research Council (MRC) guidance for the evaluation of complex interventions, made a strong case for including qualitative methods [26, 27]. In the US, in 2011, the Office of Behavioural and Social Sciences Research of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) published a guide to combining qualitative and quantitative methods for health research [28].

Whilst qualitative research methods have become far more widely accepted in health services research and many areas of medical and nursing research, and are routinely taught to health care professionals, there is still some contention about their value. In 2016, a cross‐section of the global health research community, not exclusively qualitative researchers, was moved to publish a defence of qualitative health research [1], rebuking the editors of the British Medical Journal for rejecting qualitative research on the grounds that such studies are ‘low priority’, ‘unlikely to be highly cited’, ‘lacking practical value’, or ‘not of interest to our readers’. The irony was that a number of the most highly cited papers published by the British Medical Journal were, in fact, of qualitative research [29–31]. However, the attitude of the editors was indicative of the remaining dominance of quantitative research, particularly in relation to the evaluation of treatments, programmes, and policies in the health field. In part, this has been reinforced by the emphasis in recent times on evidence‐based medicine and evidence‐based policy with their focus on the relative effectiveness and cost‐effectiveness of interventions of all types.

Undoubtedly, much more qualitative research is being undertaken in the health field than in the recent past, but the divisions between qualitative and quantitative traditions persist. The misleading notion of a fixed, hard‐edged divide between qualitative and quantitative research is reinforced by discussion within the social sciences which highlights the distinction between social theories concerned with delineating the role of social structure in determining human behaviour and those concerned with understanding the meanings people attribute to their actions [32]. The crude alignment of qualitative research with ‘action’ or interpretive approaches and quantitative research with ‘structural’ or positivist ones has meant that researchers on either side have tended to become locked into adversarial positions, often ignorant of each other's work. We discuss these philosophical differences further in Chapter 2 and suggest that the differences and resulting tensions between qualitative and quantitative research are frequently overstated. There appears to be a growing recognition within sociology, for example, that the qualitative–quantitative distinction may not be helpful or even accurate [33, 34]. In the context of health and health services research, qualitative and quantitative methods are increasingly being used together in a complementary manner in ‘mixed method’ studies [35] (see Chapter 12 for more on this).

In the period since we published our first joint authored paper on qualitative research in health care [36], the importance of quantitative research has also grown. Whilst some might argue that quantitative methods have been further privileged and entrenched by the rise of evidence‐based medicine and evidence‐based policy in the 1990s and 2000s, the role of qualitative research in providing a secure evidence base for decision‐making is increasingly acknowledged, as this chapter has indicated. As qualitative research has become more mainstream and popular, it has also increasingly been subjected to the same reporting standards and critical appraisal as quantitative research [37–39]. This has been helpful in raising awareness of poor quality qualitative research, and in turn improving the quality of the conduct and reporting of qualitative research. We continue to believe that high quality qualitative research can and must make a contribution to health and health care research.

1.5 Outline of the Structure of the Book

This book is introductory and aims to show how qualitative methods can be employed in health care research. It seeks to provide clear examples of these methods, and to indicate some of the benefits and common pitfalls in their use. It is neither a substitute for seeking the advice of a skilled, experienced researcher, nor is it an exhaustive manual for qualitative research. In addition to the references, which provide a route to more detailed material on each of the topics covered, each chapter ends with a short guide to further reading which it would be well worth perusing before planning a study or going into the field.

The book is loosely structured in five sections, with introductory foundational material on theory and ethics, followed by a group of chapters covering the five main methods of data collection and types of data (interviews, focus groups, observation, documentary analysis, and digital analysis), followed by three chapters focusing on primary and secondary analysis of the resultant data. Each of these chapters draws on classic and contemporary examples of qualitative research. The penultimate section of the book looks in more detail at the application of qualitative research alongside other approaches in mixed method, case study, and participatory styles of research. The book concludes with a reprise of the arguments about ‘quality’ in qualitative research and how quality may be assessed and assured.

References

  1. 1 Greenhalgh, T., Annandale, E., Ashcroft, R. et al. (2016). An open letter to the BMJ editors on qualitative research. BMJ 352: i563.
  2. 2 Bauman, Z. (1990). Thinking Sociologically. Oxford: Blackwell.
  3. 3 Douglas, J. (1967). The Social Meanings of Suicide. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  4. 4 Scourfield, J., Fincham, B., Langer, S., and Shiner, M. (2012). Sociological autopsy: an integrated approach to the study of suicide in men. Social Science and Medicine 74 (4): 466–473.
  5. 5 Kirk, J. and Miller, M. (1986). Reliability and Validity in Qualitative Research, Qualitative Research Methods Series, No 1. London: SAGE.
  6. 6 Byrne, E. Visual data in qualitative research: The contribution of photography to understanding the mental health hospital environment. PhD thesis. University of the West of England; 2014.
  7. 7 Wilson, N., Pope, C., Roberts, L., and Crouch, R. (2014). Governing healthcare: finding meaning in a clinical practice guideline for the management of non‐specific low back pain. Social Science and Medicine 102: 138–145.
  8. 8 Tarrant, C., O'Donnell, B., Martin, G. et al. (2016). A complex endeavour: an ethnographic study of the implementation of the sepsis six clinical care bundle. Implementation Science 11 (1): 149.
  9. 9 Ferlie, E., Fitzgerald, L., Hawkins, C., and Wood, M. (2005). The (non) spread of innovations: the mediating role of professionals. Academy of Management Journal 48 (1): 117–134.
  10. 10 Wellings, K., Field, J., Johnson, A., and Wadsworth, J. (1994). Sexual Behaviour in Britain: The National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
  11. 11 Segar, J., Rogers, A., Salisbury, C., and Thomas, C. (2013). Roles and identities in transition: boundaries of work and inter‐professional relationships at the interface between telehealth and primary care. Health and Social Care in the Community 21 (6): 606–613.
  12. 12 Salisbury, C., Thomas, C., O'Cathain, A. et al. (2015). Telehealth in chronic disease: mixed‐methods study to develop the TECH conceptual model for intervention design and evaluation. BMJ Open 5 (2): e006448.
  13. 13 Stone, L. and Campbell, J.G. (1986). The use and misuse of surveys in international development: an experiment from Nepal. Human Organisation 43: 27–37.
  14. 14 Bloor, M.J., Venters, G.A., and Samphier, M.L. (1976). Geographical variation in the incidence of operations on the tonsils and adenoids: an epidemiological and sociological investigation. The Journal of Laryngology and Otology 92: 791–801, 883–95.
  15. 15 Bloor, M. (1976). Bishop Berkeley and the adenotonsillectomy enigma: an exploration of the social construction of medical disposals. Sociology 10: 43–61.
  16. 16 O'Cathain, A., Drabble, S.J., Foster, A. et al. (2016). Being human: a qualitative interview study exploring why a telehealth intervention for management of chronic conditions had a modest effect. Journal of Medical Internet Research 18 (6): e163.
  17. 17 Morgan, M. and Watkins, C. (1988). Managing hypertension: beliefs and responses to medication among cultural groups. Sociology of Health and Illness 10: 561–578.
  18. 18 Strong, P.M. (1976). The Ceremonial Order of the Clinic. London: Routledge Kegan Paul.
  19. 19 Pope, C. (1991). Trouble in store: some thoughts on the management of waiting lists. Sociology of Health and Illness 13: 191–211.
  20. 20 Bloor, M. (1991). A minor office: the variable and socially constructed character of death certification in a Scottish city. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 32 (3): 273–287.
  21. 21 Bloor, M., Goldberg, D., and Emslie, J. (1991). Ethnostatistics and the AIDS epidemic. British Journal of Sociology 42: 131–137.
  22. 22 Turner, S., Ramsay, A., Perry, C. et al. (2016). Lessons for major system change: centralization of stroke services in two metropolitan areas of England. Journal of Health Services Research and Policy 21 (3): 156–165.
  23. 23 Malterud, K. (1993). Shared understanding of the qualitative research process: guidelines for the medical researcher. Family Practice 10: 201–206.
  24. 24 Dingwall, R., Murphy, E., Watson, P. et al. (1998). Catching goldfish: quality in qualitative research. Journal of Health Services Research and Policy 3: 167–172.
  25. 25 Pope, C. and Mays, N. (2009). Critical reflections on the rise of qualitative research. BMJ 339: b3425.
  26. 26 Craig, P., Dieppe, P., Macintyre, S. et al. (2008). Developing and evaluating complex interventions: the new Medical Research Council guidance. BMJ 337: a1655.
  27. 27 Moore, L., Audrey, S., Barker, M. et al. (2015). Process evaluation of complex interventions: Medical Research Council guidance. BMJ 350: h1258.
  28. 28 NIH Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research. Best Practices for Mixed Methods Research in the Health Sciences. 2. Bethesda: National Institutes of Health; 2018. Available from: https://obssr.od.nih.gov/wp‐content/uploads/2018/01/Best‐Practices‐for‐Mixed‐Methods‐Research‐in‐the‐Health‐Sciences‐2018‐01‐25.pdf (accessed 18 July 2019).
  29. 29 Gabbay, J. and le May, A. (2004). Evidence based guidelines or collectively constructed “mindlines?” Ethnographic study of knowledge management in primary care. BMJ 329: 1013.
  30. 30 Kai, J. (1996). What worries parents when their preschool children are acutely ill, and why: a qualitative study. BMJ 313: 983–986.
  31. 31 Hak, T., Koëter, G., and van der Wal, G. (2000). Collusion in doctor‐patient communication about imminent death: an ethnographic study. BMJ 321: 1376–1381.
  32. 32 Mechanic, D. (1989). Medical sociology: some tensions among theory, method and substance. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 30: 147–160.
  33. 33 Hammersley, M. (1992). Deconstructing the qualitative‐quantitative divide. In: Mixing Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative Research (ed. J. Brannen), 29–55. Aldershot: Avebury.
  34. 34 Payne, G., Williams, M., and Chamberlain, S. (2004). Methodological pluralism in British sociology. Sociology 38 (1): 153–163.
  35. 35 Barbour, R. (1999). The case for combining qualitative and quantitative approaches in health services research. Journal of Health Services Research and Policy 4: 39–43.
  36. 36 Pope, C. and Mays, N. (1993). Opening the black box: an encounter in the corridors of health services research. BMJ 306: 315.
  37. 37 O'Brien, B.C., Harris, I.B., Beckman, T.J. et al. (2014). Standards for reporting qualitative research: a synthesis of recommendations. Academic Medicine 89 (9): 1245–1251.
  38. 38 Tong, A., Sainsbury, P., and Craig, J. (2007). Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ): a 32‐item checklist for interviews and focus groups. International Journal for Quality in Health Care 19 (6): 349–357.
  39. 39 Kuper, A., Lingard, L., and Levinson, W. (2008). Critically appraising qualitative research. BMJ 337: a1035.

Further Reading

  1. Green, J. and Thorogood, N. (2014). Qualitative Methods for Health Research, Introducing Qualitative Methods Series, 3e. London: SAGE Publications Ltd.