| Literature DB >> 23185978 |
Allison Tong, Kate Flemming, Elizabeth McInnes, Sandy Oliver, Jonathan Craig.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The syntheses of multiple qualitative studies can pull together data across different contexts, generate new theoretical or conceptual models, identify research gaps, and provide evidence for the development, implementation and evaluation of health interventions. This study aims to develop a framework for reporting the synthesis of qualitative health research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23185978 PMCID: PMC3552766 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-12-181
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Figure 1Number of published synthesis of qualitative health research.
Figure 2Word cloud of the methodological terms used in published synthesis of qualitative health research. Word clouds give more prominence to words that appear more frequently in the source text. The methodological terms were extracted from the title/abstract/full text of 381 published synthesis of qualitative health research (to 31st May 2011) and entered into Tagxedo, an online tool which generated a word cloud.
Enhancing transparency in reporting the synthesis of qualitative research: the ENTREQ statement
| Aim | State the research question the synthesis addresses. | |
| Synthesis methodology | Identify the synthesis methodology or theoretical framework which underpins the synthesis, and describe the rationale for choice of methodology | |
| Approach to searching | Indicate whether the search was pre-planned ( | |
| Inclusion criteria | Specify the inclusion/exclusion criteria | |
| Data sources | Describe the information sources used (e.g. | |
| Electronic Search strategy | Describe the literature search | |
| Study screening methods | Describe the process of study screening and sifting | |
| Study characteristics | Present the characteristics of the included studies | |
| Study selection results | Identify the number of studies screened and provide reasons for study exclusion | |
| Rationale for appraisal | Describe the rationale and approach used to appraise the included studies or selected findings | |
| Appraisal items | State the tools, frameworks and criteria used to appraise the studies or selected findings | |
| Appraisal process | Indicate whether the appraisal was conducted independently by more than one reviewer and if consensus was required. | |
| Appraisal results | Present results of the quality assessment and indicate which articles, if any, were weighted/excluded based on the assessment and give the rationale. | |
| Data extraction | Indicate which sections of the primary studies were analysed and how were the data extracted from the primary studies? | |
| Software | State the computer software used, if any. | |
| Number of reviewers | Identify who was involved in coding and analysis. | |
| Coding | Describe the process for coding of data | |
| Study comparison | Describe how were comparisons made within and across studies | |
| Derivation of themes | Explain whether the process of deriving the themes or constructs was inductive or deductive. | |
| Quotations | Provide quotations from the primary studies to illustrate themes/constructs, and identify whether the quotations were participant quotations of the author’s interpretation. | |
| Synthesis output | Present rich, compelling and useful results that go beyond a summary of the primary studies (e.g. |
Summary of common methodologies for the synthesis of qualitative health research*
| Dixon-woods et al. 2006 [ | Kearney 2001 [ | Noblit and Hare 1988 [ | Paterson et al. 2001 [ | Thomas and Harden 2008 [ | |
| Theoretical sampling | Theoretical sampling | Non-specified | Not-specified | Systematic, comprehensive | |
| The degree to which the research findings can inform theory development | Implicit judgement about the context, quality and usefulness of the study | Judgement based on relevance; CASP | Focuses on rigour and the epistemological soundness of the research methods | Criteria related to aims, context, rationale, methods and findings, reliability, validity, appropriateness of methods for ensuring findings are grounded in participant perspectives | |
| · Concurrent iteration of the research questions | · Concurrent data collection and analysis | · Reciprocal translational analysis (translation of concepts from individual studies – 1st/2nd order constructs) | · Analyse findings – meta-data-analysis | · Line by line coding of text from primary studies | |
| · Extract data and summarise papers | · Theory is derived inductively from the data | · Refutational synthesis (explore and explain contradictions between studies – 1st/2nd order constructs) | · Analyse methods – meta-method) | · Free codes organised into descriptive themes | |
| · Define and apply codes | · Constant comparison of data | · Lines of argument (grounded theorising based on synthesising translations) | · Analyse theory – meta-theory | · Further interpretation to develop analytical themes | |
| · Develop a critique, generate themes | | | · Bring together all three components of the analysis | | |
| · New theoretical conceptualisation – synthetic construct | · Generation of a new, higher-level grounded theory | · New insights – 3rd order constructs | · Account for differences in research findings | · Analytical themes that offer a new interpretation that goes beyond the primary studies | |
| · New interpretation of phenomena studied | |||||
| Access to healthcare by vulnerable groups [ | Domestic violence [ | Medicine-taking [ | Chronic illness experience [ | Children’s experiences of health eating [ |
*This is not a complete list of methodologies as methodologies for the synthesis of qualitative health research are wide ranging; **Adapted from Barnett-Page and Thomas [1] and Spencer et al. [31]. †References selected to reflect a range of topic areas in health research.