| Literature DB >> 27506386 |
E Jean C Hay-Smith1, Melanie Brown2, Lynley Anderson3, Gareth J Treharne4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many health researchers are clinicians. Dual-role experiences are common for clinician-researchers in research involving patient-participants, even if not their own patients. To extend the existing body of literature on why dual-role is experienced, we aimed to develop a typology of common catalysts for dual-role experiences to help clinician-researchers plan and implement methodologically and ethically sound research.Entities:
Keywords: Clinician-researcher; Dual role; Meta-synthesis; Reflexivity; Research ethics; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27506386 PMCID: PMC4977678 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-016-0203-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Fig. 1Search and screening results
Included studies and contribution to themes
| Study | Clinical patterns | Connection | Study description | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-Clinical Queries | 2-Agenda Meeting | 3-Helping Hands | 4-Research or Therapy | 5-Uninvited Clinical Expert | 6-Clinical Assumptions | 7-Suspicion and Holding Back | 8-Revelations | 9-Overidentification | 10-Manipulation | Author (first-person), or sample (empirical) and setting | Methodology | |
| First-person accounts | ||||||||||||
| Arber 2006 [ | • | Nurse, palliative care | Ethnography | |||||||||
| Baarnheilm and Ekblad 2002 [ | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | Physician, psychiatry | Qualitative | |||
| Bailey 2007 [ | • | • | Nurse, emergency department | Ethnography | ||||||||
| Bland 2002 [ | • | • | • | • | • | Nurse, nursing homes | Ethnography | |||||
| Bonner and Tolhurst 2002 [ | • | Nurse, nephrology | Participant observation | |||||||||
| Burns et al. 2012 [ | • | • | • | • | Midwife, postnatal care | Participant observation | ||||||
| Burr 1996 [ | • | • | • | Nurse, intensive care | Qualitative | |||||||
| Cartwright and Limandri 1997 [ | • | • | • | • | • | Nurse, elderly care | Grounded Theory | |||||
| Clancy 2007 [ | • | • | • | • | Nurse, home oxygen | Phenomenology | ||||||
| Clinton et al. 1986 [ | • | • | • | • | Nurse, fathering | Multiple time-series survey | ||||||
| Colbourne and Sque 2004 [ | • | • | • | • | • | Nurse, cancer care | Qualitative case study | |||||
| Conneeley 2002 [ | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | Occupational therapist, brain injury rehabilitation | Phenomenology | ||
| Gardner 1996 [ | • | • | • | • | Nurse, hospital acquired infection | Qualitative | ||||||
| Groenkjaer 2002 [ | • | • | Nurse, hospital wards | Critical ethnography | ||||||||
| Hamburg and Johansson 1999 [ | • | • | • | • | • | GP, primary care | Grounded Theory | |||||
| Houghton et al. 2010 [ | • | • | Nurse, hospital wards | Multiple case study | ||||||||
| Lykkeslet and Gjengedal 2007 [ | • | • | • | Nurse, surgery | Ethnography | |||||||
| McNair et al. 2008 [ | • | • | GP, primary care | Critical phenomenology | ||||||||
| Mitchell 2011 [ | • | • | • | Midwife, pregnancy | Qualitative | |||||||
| Newbury 2011 [ | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | Nurse, palliative care | Grounded theory approach | |||
| Nicholl 2007 [ | • | • | • | • | • | Nurse, mothering | Qualitative | |||||
| Patterson 1994 [ | • | • | • | • | • | Nurse, nursing homes | Participant observation | |||||
| Profitt et al. 1993 [ | • | • | • | • | • | Nurse, stroke rehabilitation | Randomised trial | |||||
| Richards and Emslie 2000 [ | • | • | • | • | • | • | GP, primary care | Qualitative | ||||
| Shaughnessy et al. 2007 [ | • | • | Nurse, stroke rehabilitation | Randomised trial | ||||||||
| Sterling and Peterson 2005 [ | • | • | • | • | • | • | Nurse, family systems | Ethnography | ||||
| Thompson and Russo 2012 [ | • | • | • | • | • | Clinical psychologist, health settings | Qualitative | |||||
| Tuffrey-Wijne et al. 2008 [ | • | • | • | Nurse, learning disability | Ethnography | |||||||
| Empirical reports | ||||||||||||
| Beale and Wilkes 2001 [ | • | • | • | • | • | • | Nurses, various clinical research | Descriptive qualitative | ||||
| Boase et al. 2011 [ | • | • | Nurses, diabetes research | Framework approach | ||||||||
| Boydell et al. 2012 [ | • | Physicians, paediatric research | Qualitative | |||||||||
| Easter et al. 2006 [ | • | • | Physicians, nurses and patient-participants in gene transfer research | Qualitative | ||||||||
| Haigh et al. 2005 [ | • | • | • | • | Nurse, post-surgery patient-participants | Case study | ||||||
| Johnson and Macleod Clarke 2003 [ | • | • | • | • | • | • | Nurses, cancer, HIV/AIDS, dying | Qualitative | ||||
| Spilsbury et al. 2007 [ | • | • | • | Nurses, pressure mattress overlay research | Qualitative focus group | |||||||
| Wilkes and Beale 2005 [ | • | • | Nurses, various clinical research | Qualitative | ||||||||
Key: atrustworthy, bmoderately trustworthy, ctrustworthiness uncertain, GP = general practitioner
Questions for clinician-researchers planning research with patient-participants
| Using your clinical skills |
| 1. When is it appropriate to address a clinical question from a patient-participant? |
| Creating a relationship with the patient-participant |
| 6. What assumptions can you make about shared understanding based on shared clinical ground? |
| After the research |
| 11. What happens if you and the patient-participant meet again, this time as clinician and patient? |