Literature DB >> 16098166

Fieldwork in nursing research: positionality, practicalities and predicaments.

Sally Borbasi1, Debra Jackson, Lesley Wilkes.   

Abstract

AIMS: This paper draws on the literature to explore some of the issues of concern to nurses undertaking fieldwork in contemporary healthcare settings.
BACKGROUND: The emergence of poststructuralist and postmodern perspectives has raised questions about ethnographic approaches, and problematized the role of researchers in the construction of plausible and credible ethnographic accounts. As a practice discipline, nursing needs to negotiate a thorny path between methodological purity and practical application, with nurse researchers required to take account of both philosophical and pragmatic concerns. DISCUSSION: There is general agreement that researching with an individual or group rather than researching on an individual or group is the more effective way to approach fieldwork. Feminist writers appear to have dealt with this issue best, advocating intimacy, self-disclosure, and reciprocity in encounters with research participants. The duality of the nurse researcher role; power and politics and the moral implications of fieldwork are acknowledged as factors influencing nurses in the planning and conduct of fieldwork. Nurses as researchers may be better equipped than other social researchers to deal with contingencies in the field.
CONCLUSIONS: Laying the epistemological ground for the participant observer role during fieldwork and understanding its impact on the resultant ethnographic account is essential to methodological rigour in field research. Consideration of some of the practicalities and predicaments experienced by nurses as researchers when conducting fieldwork prior to going out into the field is an important research strategy and will facilitate methodological potency.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16098166     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2648.2005.03523.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Adv Nurs        ISSN: 0309-2402            Impact factor:   3.187


  5 in total

1.  An Unexpected, Yet Welcomed Outcome of the St. Louis Healthy Start Program.

Authors:  Darcell P Scharff; Keri Jupka; Lora Gulley; Kate Kasper; Ellen Barnidge
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2.  Advancing beyond the system: telemedicine nurses' clinical reasoning using a computerised decision support system for patients with COPD - an ethnographic study.

Authors:  Tina Lien Barken; Elin Thygesen; Ulrika Söderhamn
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2017-12-28       Impact factor: 2.796

3.  The role of collaborative learning in resilience in healthcare-a thematic qualitative meta-synthesis of resilience narratives.

Authors:  Cecilie Haraldseid-Driftland; Stephen Billett; Veslemøy Guise; Lene Schibevaag; Janne Gro Alsvik; Birte Fagerdal; Hilda Bø Lyng; Siri Wiig
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-08-26       Impact factor: 2.908

Review 4.  Once a clinician, always a clinician: a systematic review to develop a typology of clinician-researcher dual-role experiences in health research with patient-participants.

Authors:  E Jean C Hay-Smith; Melanie Brown; Lynley Anderson; Gareth J Treharne
Journal:  BMC Med Res Methodol       Date:  2016-08-09       Impact factor: 4.615

5.  TIME - MAKING THE BEST OF IT! A Fieldwork Study Outlining Time in Endoscopy Facilities for Short-Term Stay.

Authors:  Karin Bundgaard; Erik E Sørensen; Charlotte Delmar
Journal:  Open Nurs J       Date:  2016-04-27
  5 in total

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