Publication | Closed Access
Critically appraising qualitative research
750
Citations
7
References
2008
Year
NursingCounselingFamily MedicineQuantitative MethodsQualitative SociologyQualitative InterpretationQualitative AnalysisClinical SpecialtiesSix Key QuestionsEducationProfessional CounselingKey QuestionsResearch EthicsQualitative MethodResearch Synthesis
Let's collect content: Purpose: "Six key questions will help readers to assess qualitative research" (first line). Also maybe other Purpose content? There's also [Purpose, Mechanism] line: "However, the thorough assessment of qualitative research is an interpretive act and requires informed reflective thought rather than the simple application of a scoring system." That is both Purpose and Mechanism. So Purpose content includes both sentences.
Six key questions will help readers to assess qualitative research #### Summary points Over the past decade, readers of medical journals have gained skills in critically appraising studies to determine whether the results can be trusted and applied to their own practice settings. #### Summary points Over the past decade, readers of medical journals have gained skills in critically appraising studies to determine whether the results can be trusted and applied to their own practice settings. Criteria have been designed to assess studies that use quantitative methods, and these are now in common use. In this article we offer guidance for readers on how to assess a study that uses qualitative research methods by providing six key questions to ask when reading qualitative research (box 1). However, the thorough assessment of qualitative research is an interpretive act and requires informed reflective thought rather than the simple application of a scoring system. #### Box 1 Key questions to ask when reading qualitative research studies One of the critical decisions in a qualitative study is whom or what to include in the sample—whom to interview, whom to observe, what texts to analyse. An understanding that qualitative research is based in experience and in the construction of meaning, combined with the specific research question, should guide the sampling process. For example, a study of the experience of survivors of domestic violence that examined their reasons for not seeking help from healthcare providers might focus on interviewing a …
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