| Literature DB >> 26979748 |
Emma F France1, Mary Wells2, Heidi Lang2, Brian Williams2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Meta-ethnography is a unique, systematic, qualitative synthesis approach widely used to provide robust evidence on patient and clinician beliefs and experiences and understandings of complex social phenomena. It can make important theoretical and conceptual contributions to health care policy and practice.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Meta-ethnography; Meta-synthesis; Qualitative analysis; Qualitative reviews; Systematic reviews
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26979748 PMCID: PMC4791806 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-016-0218-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Questions to guide whether, when and how to update a meta-ethnography
| Guiding questions | Issues to consider | This is a consideration in deciding | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whether to update | When to update | How to update | ||
| Q1. What was the aim of the original meta-ethnography (and is it time-sensitive)? | If data are out-of-date, then an update might be needed. If the aim was tied to a specific time period in the past, the original findings may not be relevant to current practice. The aim may have implications for how to update, given the original search strategy. | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Q2. What is the aim of the updated meta-ethnography? | The original and updated search strategies must be compatible with the update aim. | ✓ | ||
| Q3. What is the publication rate of relevant new studies? | A high volume of publications could warrant an update and influence how the update is done (see also Q6). | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Q4. What is the quality of the (conduct and reporting) of the original meta-ethnography? | If it is low quality: | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Q5. Have there been methodological advances in qualitative reviewing and/or the meta-ethnography approach? | If yes, an update could increase the trustworthiness and hence utility of the findings. In terms of timing, it could be re-done immediately (see also Q6). | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Q6. Was conceptual saturation achieved in the original meta-ethnography? | If yes, inclusion of further relevant studies is unlikely to add insights unless they contain new data on experiences (see Q7). | ✓ | ||
| Q7. Are there (publications on) new patient populations, health care contexts, treatments and/or interventions since the original meta-ethnography? | If yes, an update could be useful because people’s experiences might differ from those already reported. Could require a revised review question and literature search strategy. | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Q8. Does the review question need to be revised? | If answer to Q7 is “yes”, then it may be necessary to revise the review question, literature search strategy and inclusion criteria, e.g. to include a new patient population. | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Q9. What are the potential consequences of not updating the original meta-ethnography? | If findings are out-of-date but being applied in current policy/practice, the findings may not be useful or may even be harmful. | ✓ | ||
Fig. 1Flow chart of the decisions whether and how to update a meta-ethnography
Summary of characteristics of different methods of updating the analysis and synthesis in a meta-ethnography
| Method of updating the analysis and synthesis in a meta-ethnography | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristics | Extend and renovate the house (add to and revise original) | Build a new house next door (do a new standalone meta-ethnography and compare to original) | Knock the house down and rebuild it (start again from scratch) |
| Possible advantages | |||
| One coherent model, set of findings, conclusions (increases utility of output for end users) | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Can lead to new conceptual insights | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Allows innovation in analysis/synthesis process in update | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| No arbitrary dividing date between literature in original and updated meta-ethnographies | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Efficient use of resource expended on original meta-ethnography | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Facilitates comparisons between two sets of literature from different time periods | ✓ | ||
| More easily done by a new team of reviewers | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Can implement methodological advances in meta-ethnography/qualitative reviewing | ✓ | ||
| Can improve quality and utility of poor quality original meta-ethnography | ✓ | ||
| Suitable if you have revised review question or study selection criteria | ✓ | ||
| Possible disadvantages | |||
| Challenging for a new team of reviewers | ✓ | ||
| Update findings might be influenced by original findings, especially if done by original reviewers | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Can minimise influence of findings from original meta-ethnography, especially if done by new reviewers | ✓ | ||
| Lack of established methods for updating original analysis/synthesis | ✓ | ||
| More likely to have large number of articles to synthesise (>40 is challenging) | ✓ | ||
Six synthesised concepts from original and updated meta-ethnography
| Translated concepts from phase 5 of the original | Translated concepts from phase 5 of the update | Final synthesised concepts from phase 6 of original & update (encompassing all translated concepts) | Synthesised concept description in original meta-ethnography | Synthesised concept description in updated meta-ethnography |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| • Living and waiting | Uncertainty and waiting | Being in limbo—the uncertainty of living with the disease and of the future. | Being in limbo—the uncertainty of living with the disease and of the future. | |
| • Disruption to life and living | • The experience of diagnosis | Disruption to daily life | The disruption of treatment to the patient's physical functioning, emotions and social life. | Patients experience disruption in all aspects of life because of the effects of cancer and its treatment, beginning with the shock of diagnosis. After diagnosis, life is disrupted physically, emotionally and socially. |
| • Enduring or moving on | The diminished self | The temporary or longer-lasting functional, social and existential losses patients experience and the impact of these. | Patients experience temporary or longer-lasting functional, social and existential losses, which can alter their life expectations. The stigma of changed appearance and speech, damaging experiences with health care professionals (HCPs), and perceived rejection by their next of kin contribute to losses. | |
| • Information | • Explaining HNC to family and children | Making sense of the experience | Patients' continual efforts to make sense of cancer and what is happening to them and how they develop expectations about a likely outcome. | Patients' continual efforts to make sense of their cancer and what is happening to them and to help their family - including their children - to make sense of their illness. |
| • Connection with HCPs | • Connection with family and social network | Sharing the burden | The importance of a supportive relationship with HCPs whose role is crucial in instilling hope, maintaining self-worth and counteracting patients' vulnerability. | Developing supportive connections with family, friends, their wider social network, HCPs and other people with HNC helps patients to cope emotionally and practically with their illness. |
| • Finding ways to deal with an uncertain future | • Enhanced future | Finding a path | Reflects the nature of life beyond cancer. Patients perceive their future as either diminished or changed. | Reflects how patients characterise life beyond HNC. Some limit their focus to the present, living in the here and now, particularly when cancer is terminal. Others perceive their future as either diminished, changed or enhanced. Establishing successful coping and self-management strategies is associated with perceiving a changed or enhanced future. |
Adapted from Lang et al.20
Summary of the phases of meta-ethnography conduct and updating
| Noblit and Hare’s [ | How we conducted each phase in our original HNC meta-ethnography | How we conducted each phase in our updated HNC meta-ethnography |
|---|---|---|
| 1. “Getting started” (the topic focus). | To examine patients’ experiences of HNC to provide a context for future research. | To examine patients’ experiences of HNC to provide a context for future research. |
| 2. Deciding what is relevant to the initial interest. | Exhaustive systematic search strategy; inclusion of qualitative studies of the experience of HNC up to September 2007. Included 15 articles. | Replicated earlier search strategy and inclusion criteria from September 2007 to September 2011. Identified a further 14 relevant articles. |
| 3. Reading the studies. | We identified, recorded and described on index cards all the primary study authors’ concepts and main conclusions in the 15 articles. | We identified, recorded and described on index cards the primary study authors’ concepts and main conclusions in the 14 articles. |
| 4. Determining how studies are related. | We directly compared the primary study authors’ concepts and found them to be reciprocal (about roughly similar things). | We juxtaposed the primary study authors’ concepts from each new article with our 11 translated concepts from phase 5 of the original to compare meanings. Most concepts from the new articles were reciprocal, but some were contradictory. |
| 5. Translating the studies into one another. | We systematically compared the meanings of all the primary study authors’ concepts across the articles and grouped the concepts according to shared meaning through reciprocal translation to produce 11 translated concepts. | We continued the original translation process by systematically comparing the meanings of the primary study authors’ concepts from each new article with our 11 translated concepts from the original. Most concepts confirmed or enhanced the original translated concepts. We developed 9 additional translated concepts. We re-examined the articles in the original meta-ethnography to check if they did in fact support the new issues and concepts. |
| 6. Synthesising translations. | We compared and contrasted our 11 translated concepts and found that some could encompass or were similar to others resulting in a final six synthesised concepts (“synthesised translations”): uncertainty and waiting, disruption to daily life, the diminished self, making sense of the experience, sharing the burden, and finding a path. | We juxtaposed the 11 original and 9 new translated concepts with our six synthesised concepts from phase 6 of the original meta-ethnography to systematically compare meanings. We refined our synthesised concepts to reflect the new and contradictory concepts. |
| 7. Expressing the synthesis. | In written form in an unpublished doctoral thesis. | In written and diagrammatic form in a published journal article. |