| Literature DB >> 9819729 |
E A Davies1, S M Hall, C R Clarke, M P Bannon, A P Hopkins.
Abstract
Research interviews with seriously ill patients are now often undertaken in quality of life research. Clinicians may be approached by researchers wishing to study their patients, and may be worried at some ethical aspects of interviewing. Concerns may include potential distress which interviews may cause, that they may interfere with the doctor-patient relationship, and perhaps, a scepticism that techniques addressing psychosocial concerns produce only 'soft' data. However, interview methods are a valuable tool for medical sociologists, nurse researchers and others. We discuss here some reflections following a study that involved interviewing severely ill patients with incurable malignant cerebral glioma. We use our observations to answer concerns and to discuss problems that arose. We suggest areas researchers and clinicians might consider before embarking on such collaboration.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9819729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J R Coll Physicians Lond ISSN: 0035-8819