| Literature DB >> 32148701 |
Wayne A Babchuk1,2.
Abstract
The primary purpose of this article is to provide family physician researchers interested in conducting a qualitative research study a concise guide to the analysis. Drawing from approaches outlined in popular research methodology textbooks and employing an exemplar from a minority health disparities research study, this article outlines specific steps useful for researchers and practitioners in the field of family medicine. This process of qualitative data analysis is situated within the larger framework of qualitative research to better position those new to qualitative designs to more effectively conduct their studies. A 10-step process useful for guiding qualitative data analysis is provided. The 10 steps include (1) assembling data for analysis, (2) refamiliarising oneself with the data, (3) open or initial coding procedures, (4) generating categories and assigning codes to them, (5) generating themes from categories, (6) strategies of validation, (7) interpreting and reporting findings from the participants, (8) interpreting and reporting findings from the literature, (9) visual representations of data and findings, and (10) strengths, limitations, delimitations and suggestions for future research. This work provides clear and accessible guidelines for conducting qualitative data analysis for emerging researchers that is applicable across a wide array of topics, disciplines and settings. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: family medicine; qualitative research
Year: 2019 PMID: 32148701 PMCID: PMC6910734 DOI: 10.1136/fmch-2018-000040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fam Med Community Health ISSN: 2305-6983
Iconic publications marking the qualitative revolution in the social sciences5 20 27 34–38
| Author(s) and publication | Importance of the research |
| Becker | An early study employing qualitative research referenced by Denzin and Lincoln’s |
| Garfinkel, | Influenced by his study of the Human Relations Area Files, a compendium of cross-cultural research on more than 330 groups across the globe housed at Yale University, sociologist Harold Garfinkel outlines the methods for understanding how people make sense of their daily lives and negotiate social interaction. |
| Glaser and Strauss, | Also part of the golden age of rigorous qualitative analysis referenced above, sociologists Barney Glaser and Anselm Strauss develop a method to generate theory from data where little previous research exists. Identified by Merriam and Tisdell |
| Blumer, | Building off the work of George Herbert Mead, Chicago School sociologist Herbert Blumer further popularises the theoretical approach of symbolic interactionism that serves as one of the theoretical pillars of qualitative research. |
| Geertz, | Anthropologist Clifford Geertz borrows the terms ‘thick and rich description’ from philosopher Gilbert Ryle and underscores the importance of interpretive approaches to the study of human social behaviour. Credited by Glaser and Strauss |
| Guba, | Identified by Merriam and Tisdell |
| Spradley, | Anthropologist James Spradley advances the developmental research sequence consisting of 12 major steps for conducting an ethnographic study. Focuses on the ethnographic interview. |
| Spradley, | As above, but focuses on participant observation. |
| Lincoln | Educators Yvonne Lincoln and Egon Guba coin the term trustworthiness to recast quantitative evaluative criteria of internal and external validity, reliability, and generalisability with qualitative procedures of credibility, dependability, confirmability and transferability. Lends increasing rigour to the qualitative research enterprise. |
Steps of qualitative data analysis as outlined in four popular textbooks7 8 19 22
| Merriam and Tisdell | Creswell and Poth | Marshall and Rossman | Creswell and Guetterman |
| Identifying segments or units of data responsive to research questions. | Managing and organising the data. | Organising the data. | Preparing and organising the data for analysis. |
| Category construction | Reading and memoing emergent ideas. | Immersion in the data. | Initial exploration of the data through the process of coding. |
| Sorting categories and data. | Describing and classifying codes into themes. | Generating case summaries and possible categories and themes. | Using codes to develop descriptions and themes. |
| Naming the categories. | Developing and assessing interpretations. | Coding the data. | Representing the findings through narratives and visuals. |
| How many categories? | Representing and visualising the data. | Offering interpretations through analytical memos. | Interpreting the meaning of the results through personal reflection and use of literature. |
| Becoming more theoretical | Searching for alternative understandings. | Conducting strategies to validate the accuracy of the findings. | |
| Writing the report. |
Ten steps and procedures for conducting qualitative data analysis
| Steps | Procedures |
| 1. Assembling materials for analysis. | Transcribe interviews and gather other forms of data to be analysed. Print transcripts with margins on the left and right sides of text for coding. |
| 2. Refamiliarising oneself with the data. | Conduct an initial read through the transcripts and/or notes from participant observation, documents and so on. Begin or continue memoing in this stage. |
| 3. Open or initial coding procedures. | Conduct a second read through the transcripts and/or data and begin initial (open) coding. Assign ‘descriptors’ or codes to text segments or passages. Codes written in the left margins of the text, memos and reflective notes on the right margins. Repeat this step several times as you begin to see patterns and categories in the data. |
| 4. Generating categories and assigning codes to them. | Process of looking for similarities and narrowing codes (winnowing) conceptually into categories. Rearrange and refocus categories to eliminate overlap and redundancy. Assign names to categories that emerge from the data. |
| 5. Generating themes from categories. | Compare categories and look for the story they tell. Identify overarching themes that cross-cut the data or categories. |
| 6. Strategies of validation. | Use standards of validation to ensure trustworthiness (multiple forms of data collection, multiple coders, member checking, peer review, external audits and so on). |
| 7. Interpreting and reporting findings from the participants. | Building off member checking, peer review and previous data analysis steps, develop a table of quotes for themes by participants. Weave quotes into discussion of findings. |
| 8. Interpreting and reporting findings from the literature. | As above, develop a table of quotes/passages from the literature that support themes to reference during write-up. |
| 9. Visual representations of data and findings. | Represent findings through visual display of tables, figures, graphs, flow charts and diagrams. |
| 10. Strengths, limitations, delimitations and suggestions for future research. | Discuss strengths, limitations and delimitations of the research to help ensure transparency throughout the research process. Provide directions for future research. |
Example of an Excel coding document used in the Minority Health Disparities Study*
| Question 10. In your position, how do you feel research can be better utilised to help you be more effective in serving minority populations? | ||||
| Interview 1 | Interview 2 | Interview 3 | Second round of coding | Third round of coding |
| Research-to-practice: (1) enhancing skills of public health workforce, (2) informing public health workforce and (3) informing the researchers. | Incorporation of culture, questions and research appropriate for the population. One solution for one population does not work with another. | We need: more evidence-based models, more focused research on what is effective, better cutting among data, getting people to use research, accessible research, making evidence-based concepts more firmly implanted in the programme. | Enhancing skills of workforce, informing public workforce, informing the researchers, need more organisations to participate, gatekeepers bring back information, package into resources for organisations, tool kits, share information collaboratively, determine gaps, re-envision the paradigms applied to disparities, people do not know what evidence-based practice is, tailor presentations to different audiences, need applicable research, all need basic understanding of what research means, making time to read research. | Make time to read, interpret research, address time, define solutions, quality improvement, marketing research, applicable research, better cutting among data, |
*Names listed are pseudonyms.
Figure 1Visual depiction of emerging categories during data analysis for participant responses to interview questions 3–9 in the Minority Health Disparities Study.
Figure 2Visual display of theme 2 ‘Improving Minority data’ from the Minority Health Disparities Study.
Quotes from participants for theme 3: priority setting and applicability of research in the Minority Health Disparities Study*
| Participant | Quote |
| Sally | “Really understanding an issue as it truly is in the community. So our challenge is to ensure that you…have an ear out there everywhere, not just being selective into what you’re hearing or who you’re talking to.” |
| Sheri | “…if that was not a priority for that particular population base, then it wouldn’t matter what we brought to the table. So it was very important to us to first get their feedback and what their priorities were, and then we tailored our monthly educations around that.” |
| Sheri | “The most important thing is truly listening and being very in tune to what the needs are of the population you’re serving.” |
| Doris | “…I think part of it is we forget that sometimes we create programs based on what we think we believe the answer is, and we don’t always go to where the source of the information is.” |
| Doris | “There is a huge disconnect between the services and the leadership and the research. It’s based more on feelings and emotions and a connection to a specific organization than it is based on truly the evidence.” |
| Sheri | “I think there’s a lot of challenges when you look at the rural setting because things that work in an urban setting just don’t necessarily fit in that same mold.” |
| Martha | “…we know these things work, how do I make that work here?” |
| Harry | “…it’s not always clear that the risk and protective factors for any particular condition for American Indians is going to be the same for the general population. There might be culturally specific things going on, there might be factors that are related in different ways.” |
| Zach | “A lot of the research that even we have access to is…not local research, so how applicable is it, you know? Maybe they’re at bigger cities, or maybe the populations are different even regionally, or whatever…” |
| Zach | “…we all should be paying a little bit more attention probably to what’s going on, at least locally.” |
| Cheryl | “Things that have actually been tried and true with minority populations or specific minority populations are very difficult to find.” |
*Names listed are pseudonyms.
Quotes from the research literature that support the theme priority setting and applicability of research in the Minority Health Disparities Study
| Researchers | Quotes |
| Wallerstein and Duran | ’Researchers’ interests in knowledge production are often different from the practical interest of communities in improving programs and services in community settings. These issues are important to negotiate throughout the research endeavor so that communities can directly benefit in shorter time cycles, even if final analysis and publication is a long-term process’ (p314). |
| Wallerstein and Duran | University power in research: ‘…researchers often have the perceived power base of being experts with “scientific knowledge”’ (p315). |
| Israel | ‘…methodological flexibility is essential, that is, the use of research methods that are tailored to the purpose of the research and the context and interests of the community involved’ (p189). |
| Layde | ‘Limitations of research-driven approaches to evidence-based public health arise when fundamental characteristics of the specific community are ignored or not understood and when communities do not feel ownership of health improvement interventions’ (p617). |
| Koh | ‘Effectiveness comes through brief, carefully constructed, and feasible interventions that public health workers can implement in multiple real-world settings. These efforts refocus on (citing Glasgow, 2008) ‘research that is contextual, practical, and robust’ and move public health toward sustained intervention effects at both the individual and community levels’ (pS74). |