| Literature DB >> 17224044 |
Patricia J Lucas1, Janis Baird, Lisa Arai, Catherine Law, Helen M Roberts.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The inclusion of qualitative studies in systematic reviews poses methodological challenges. This paper presents worked examples of two methods of data synthesis (textual narrative and thematic), used in relation to one review, with the aim of enabling researchers to consider the strength of different approaches.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17224044 PMCID: PMC1783856 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-7-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Example study summaries
| Study | Participants | Aims (where possible verbatim) | Infant age | Setting | Key findings |
| Baughcum et al. 1998 | 16 dieticians, 6 WIC* mothers, 8 teenage WIC mothers | "to identify maternal beliefs and practices about child feeding that are associated with the development of childhood obesity" | 12–36 months age | WIC* clinic and WIC* nurses | Mothers were not concerned about overweight in their children. This was perceived as a problem by dieticians and study authors. |
| Baughcum et al. 2001 | 454 mothers, 258 attending WIC* and 196 attending private child health clinics. | "to determine if the factor scores [from questionnaire under development] were associated cross-sectionally with (1) the child being overweight at the time of the survey (2) maternal obesity, and (3) lower socio-economic status." | 11–24 months, but considering retrospectively to first year. | Health clinics (WIC* or private) | Mothers were more concerned about under eating and underweight, although where children were overweight there was concern about overeating and overweight. |
* Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children
Stepwise textual narrative synthesis
| There was overlap between sub-groups. For example a study of mothers 2 months after their infants were admitted to NICU would fall within 3 groups, determined by the 'participants being mothers', the 'age of the infant's and the fact that the infants were considered 'high risk'. |
| A study by Baughcum and colleagues[28] reported on focus groups conducted with 14 mothers attending WIC clinics (Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children) in USA with infants aged 12–36 months. The study focussed on maternal attitudes to feeding and proposed an association between these and overweight in their babies. The study design was judged adequate, although the bias introduced by sampling from WIC clinics was not discussed by study authors. Authors concluded that mothers are more concerned about under- than overweight; two supporting quotations stated that weight gain is always good, because it means children are eating. |
| Most of the studies in this review (16/19) explored the views of mothers. The mothers, varied in terms of the age of their infants, the present and past health status of their children, their country of residence, their country of origin, income level, socio-economic status (SES), and number of children. North American Caucasians made up most of the sample. Background data for participants was often unknown, unreported or incomplete. Sampling strategies in the studies created difficulties in interpreting findings. For example, three studies explicitly set out to sample low income groups[28,29,37] using WIC clinics to achieve this. To be recruited to these studies, families needed to have a low income, but also needed to register for the WIC programme and attend clinics. This strategy is likely to selectively recruit participants[29]. Studies typically did not allow comparison between groups (for example those from different ethnic backgrounds) because findings were not reported separately. |
| Growth and size were concerns for mothers, particularly achieving average or normal growth. Mothers used a variety of sources of information to define norms, including growth charts, clothing and familial patterns of growth/size. There was evidence of concern for underweight, but the extent of concern about overweight was unclear. |
Stepwise thematic synthesis
| -the word 'normal' frequently used by mothers e.g. "you don't want him to be seven feet tall, you just want him to be normal, like everyone else." [20] |
| Normal for family; |
| Themes referring to norms of healthy size or growth |
| Seven studies reported data on how participants assessed or defined normal size [20,28,31,37,38,42–44] Four themes emerged; |
| 1. Medical definitions, including the use of growth charts [37,38,42] |