| Literature DB >> 34865630 |
Georgia B Black1, Sandra van Os2, Samantha Machen2, Naomi J Fulop2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The relationship between ethnography and healthcare improvement has been the subject of methodological concern. We conducted a scoping review of ethnographic literature on healthcare improvement topics, with two aims: (1) to describe current ethnographic methods and practices in healthcare improvement research and (2) to consider how these may affect habit and skill formation in the service of healthcare improvement.Entities:
Keywords: Ethnography; Healthcare improvement; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34865630 PMCID: PMC8647364 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-021-01466-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.612
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Method | • Stated to be using ethnographic methods of any kind | • Meta-ethnography or meta-synthesis • Scoping review or other review methodologies • Interviewing or observational work alone without reference to ethnographic lens |
| Subject matter | • Studies relating to healthcare topics or from an applied healthcare discipline, as defined by the specific search terms | • Public health topics (health promotion, screening, vaccination, communicable disease management, etc.) • Health-related topics that are not within health service context, such as o self-management techniques, care homes, social care, peer support groups, refugee centres, day care, community interventions, prisons o health beliefs, cultural attitudes, patient views, disease experiences o trial acceptability, research acceptability o ethnography related to basic science • Social care • Organisational studies that are not situated in health service settings • Studies about ethnographic methodology with no specific reference to health or healthcare |
| Study design | • Peer-reviewed publications • Studies that state their use of ethnographic methods | • Commentary, letter, response, critical review • Book review |
Fig. 1PRISMA statement of all references retrieved, screened and included in the scoping review
Characteristics of studies in review
| Method summary | |
| Focused ethnography | 25 |
| Thematic analysis | 21 |
| Grounded theory study | 15 |
| Case study | 13 |
| Mixed methods | 13 |
| Institutional ethnography | 12 |
| Critical ethnography | 12 |
| Content analysis | 8 |
| Constant comparison | 7 |
| Discourse analysis | 6 |
| Auto-ethnography | 2 |
| Other | 107 |
| Regiona | |
| Middle East | 5 |
| South America | 11 |
| Asia | 15 |
| Africa | 22 |
| Australasia | 33 |
| Europe (excl. UK) | 47 |
| UK | 74 |
| North America | 95 |
| Healthcare subject area | |
| Clinical communication | 3 |
| HIV-AIDS | 3 |
| Intensive Care Unit | 7 |
| Medication prescribing and management | 8 |
| Cancer | 10 |
| Paediatrics | 10 |
| Surgery and orthopaedics | 10 |
| Patient safety | 11 |
| Emergency medicine and acute care | 12 |
| Chronic illness | 12 |
| Family doctors, primary care and general practice | 12 |
| Nursing practice | 13 |
| Healthcare technology | 14 |
| Maternity care and reproductive medicine | 15 |
| Quality of care improvement and healthcare reform | 18 |
| Mental health and psychiatry | 19 |
| Dementia, care of the elderly, end of life care, palliative care | 20 |
| No info/other | 86 |
asome studies have been allocated to more than one region
Ethnographic methodology and its relevance to healthcare improvement
| Ethnographic methodology used | Description | Example paper | Relevance to healthcare improvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Video-reflexive ethnographic study | Collecting in-depth data on intimate or micro-interactions | Patients’ and families’ perspectives of patient safety at the end of life: a video-reflexive ethnography study. (Collier, Sorensen, Iedema, 2016) [ | • Able to capture complexity in delivery of healthcare. • Irrefutable basis for improving healthcare delivery from the 'bottom up' • Video footage played back to participants. • Video footage challenges the taken for granted aspects of practice individuals may not be aware of |
| Peer ethnography | Peers collecting data from excluded or vulnerable populations | Using Peer Ethnography to address health disparities among young Black and Latino men who have sex with men. (Mutchler et al., 2013) [ | • Improves access to marginalised groups • Data collection on healthcare topics that may only happen between peers (for example, discussions about substance use with men who have sex with men) |
| Focussed ethnography | Focus on a discrete community or organisation or social phenomena; problem-driven | Culture of Care for Infants with Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome: A Focused Ethnography. (Nelson, 2016) [ | • Method often used in nursing research • Intense, short-term observation and interview data collection provides rich and thick description of culture of care • Rapid feedback loop into improvement through focus and insider status |
| Critical ethnography | Projects with vulnerable populations and/or political improvement agendas | Nursing casualization and communication: a critical ethnography. (Batch and Windsor, 2014) [ | • Method gives focus to power, communicative distortions and context • 'Critical' element turned the focus to structures and situations of power and dominance that underpinned nursing culture |
| Institutional ethnography | Research studying complex social issues and projects that aim to achieve meaningful social change at the nexus of health professions education and other social systems | Homelessness, health, and literacy: an institutional ethnographic study of the social organization of health care in Ontario, Canada. (Hughes, 2018) [ | • Insights to explicate the complex and invisible relations that exist being people, place, and things. • Powerful tool to explore the multi-layer entity of health care |
| Qualitative methodology incorporated into ethnographic studies | |||
| Grounded theory | Researcher co-constructs theories with the research participants, building the theory de novo from iterative data collection | Using an emic and etic ethnographic technique in a grounded theory study of information use by practice nurses in New Zealand. (Hoare et al., 2013) [ | • Focus on theory generation supports generalisability of healthcare improvement recommendations • Incorporating of grounded theory techniques such as memoing heightens reflexivity [ • Gives priority to the studied phenomena rather than the study setting |
| Thematic analysis | Flexible qualitative analysis method of deriving themes from data through systematic coding procedures | Taking the heat or taking the temperature? A qualitative study of a large-scale exercise in seeking to measure for improvement, not blame. (Armstrong et al., 2018) [ | • Findings are (potentially) accessible to different audiences due to thematic presentation • Allows analysis of observation and interview data from a diverse sample of organisations • Can thematically explore people's views as well as see what they did in practice |