| Literature DB >> 26606922 |
E F France1, N Ring2, J Noyes3, M Maxwell4, R Jepson5, E Duncan6, R Turley7, D Jones8, I Uny9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Designing and implementing high-quality health care services and interventions requires robustly synthesised evidence. Syntheses of qualitative research studies can provide evidence of patients' experiences of health conditions; intervention feasibility, appropriateness and acceptability to patients; and advance understanding of health care issues. The unique, interpretive, theory-based meta-ethnography synthesis approach is suited to conveying patients' views and developing theory to inform service design and delivery. However, meta-ethnography reporting is often poor quality, which discourages trust in, and use of, meta-ethnography findings. Users of evidence syntheses require reports that clearly articulate analytical processes and findings. Tailored research reporting guidelines can raise reporting standards but none exists for meta-ethnography. This study aims to create an evidence-based meta-ethnography reporting guideline articulating the methodological standards and depth of reporting required to improve reporting quality. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26606922 PMCID: PMC4660777 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-015-0068-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Fig. 1Role of meta-ethnography reporting guidelines in facilitating use of synthesised research evidence
Fig. 2eMERGe mixed methods research design
Fig. 3The seven phases of Noblit and Hare’s [13] meta-ethnography approach
Draft search strategy for Medline for Stage 1 methodological systematic review
| 1 | metaethnograph*.mp. |
| 2 | meta ethnograph*.mp. |
| 3 | Meta-ethnograph*.mp. |
| 4 | qualitative evidence synthes?s.mp. |
| 5 | noblit.mp. |
| 6 | (qualitative adj2 (review or systematic or overview)).mp. |
| 7 | (“third order” adj2 construct*).mp. |
| 8 | (“line* of argument” or “line*-of-argument”) |
| 9 | (metanarrative or meta narrative or meta-narrative or metasynthes?s or meta synthes?s or meta-synthes?s).mp. |
| 10 | or/1–9 |
| 11 | ((good or best or recommend* or quality) adj3 (guid* or design or standards or practice or practices or reporting or method*)).mp. |
| 12 | ((publishing or reporting) adj2 (guid* or design or standards or practice or practices or method*)).mp. |
| 13 | Publishing/st [Standards] |
| 14 | methods/st |
| 15 | 11 or 12 or 13 or 14 |
| 16 | 10 and 15 |
When searching bibliogrpahic databases 'wildcards' are used in a search query to represent unknown characters.In MEDLINE, the asterisk (*) represents any group of characters, including no character and a question mark (?) represents any single character, e.g. 'meta synthes?s' will find 'meta syntheses' and 'meta synthesis.'
Fig. 4Components of Stage 2 - drafting good practice principles and standards in meta-ethnography conduct and reporting
Draft search strategy for Medline for Stage 2 systematic literature review and audit
| 1 | metaethnograph*.mp. |
| 2 | meta ethnograph*.mp. |
| 3 | Meta-ethnograph*.mp. |
| 4 | qualitative evidence synthes?s.mp. |
| 5 | noblit.mp. |
| 6 | (qualitative adj2 (review or systematic or overview)).mp. |
| 7 | (“third order” adj2 construct*).mp. |
| 8 | (“line* of argument” or “line*-of-argument”) |
| 9 | (metanarrative or meta narrative or meta-narrative or metasynthes?s or meta synthes?s or meta-synthes?s).mp. |
| 10 | or/1–9 |
When searching bibliogrpahic databases 'wildcards' are used in a search query to represent unknown characters.In MEDLINE, the asterisk (*) represents any group of characters, including no character and a question mark (?) represents any single character, e.g. 'meta synthes?s' will find 'meta syntheses' and 'meta synthesis.'
Fig. 5An example of a colour histogram of previous responses from The Stirling eDelphi Platform©