| Literature DB >> 30397637 |
Charlotte Simonÿ1,2,3, Kirsten Specht4,5, Ingrid Charlotte Andersen6, Kirsten Kjær Johansen7,8, Charlotte Nielsen9,10,11, Hanne Agerskov10,11.
Abstract
In-depth knowledge of what it means to patients to receive health care services is crucial to the development of adequate protocols for nursing. Qualitative research allows us to gain important insight into what is experienced by and meaningful to patients. The French philosopher Paul Ricoeur's thoughts have inspired qualitative researchers to conduct various forms of analysis and interpretation that increase our knowledge of ways of being-in-the-world. This article describes and discusses how a specific approach to derive in-depth knowledge of patients' lived experiences can be taken. A combination of participant observations and interviews was used to generate data. Field notes and transcribed interviews were gathered as one collective text and analyzed and interpreted with inspiration from Ricoeur's thoughts on narratives and interpretation. This approach is argued to be a significant way of developing in-depth knowledge of patients' lived experiences. Such knowledge is important within nursing science.Entities:
Keywords: Ricoeur’s philosophy; interviews; participant observation; patients’ lived experiences; phenomenological-hermeneutic; qualitative research
Year: 2018 PMID: 30397637 PMCID: PMC6207962 DOI: 10.1177/2333393618807395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Qual Nurs Res ISSN: 2333-3936
An Example of a Structural Analysis Regarding the Finding: As a Heart Patient in Rehabilitation, You Become a Member of an Edifying Fellowship.
| Units of Meaning: “What Is Said/What Is Observed” | Units of Significance: “What Is Being Talked About/ What the Observation Is About” | Theme |
|---|---|---|
| P9: “One or two days after returning home from the hospital, I received an invitation by mail. It said that I had been enrolled on Heart Team Two and that they had planned an eight-week programme. And of course I signed up. And there are more sides to it. First, there is the professional one, i.e. regarding the exercises. And then of course there is also the social aspect. And there is no doubt that this also plays a part. It does not really require much before you obtain a kind of teammate feeling, seeing that we are all in the same boat. It has been quite a pleasant experience.” (Int.) | Participating in the in-hospital rehabilitation is like entering a shared sanctuary for the patients. | Becoming a member of an edifying fellowship |
Note. An example of a structural analysis made of field notes (FN) and interviews (Int.), from the study of what it meant to patients afflicted by a minor heart attack to participate in cardiac rehabilitation. The arrows indicate that the process of structuring units of meaning and units of significance and identifying themes can be characterized as dialectical because the analysis moves forward and backward among these three levels.
Figure 1.Illustration of the process of analysis and critical interpretation.
Note. Analysis and critical interpretation take place in dialectical movements between three levels, consisting of a naïve reading, structural analysis, and critical interpretation and discussion.
Critical Interpretation and Discussion.
| This interpretation finds that the patients afflicted by a minor heart attack value being together in “The Heart Team” during cardiac rehabilitation. |
Note. An example of critical interpretation and discussion that follows the structural analysis is presented in Table 1.