9 results
Search Results
2. A sociology of public responses to hospital change and closure.
- Author
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Stewart, Ellen
- Subjects
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DECISION making , *HOSPITAL closures , *INTERVIEWING , *MANAGEMENT , *NATIONAL health services , *ORGANIZATIONAL change , *PUBLIC opinion , *SOCIAL skills , *SOCIOLOGY , *QUALITATIVE research , *EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
The "problem" of public resistance to hospital closure is a recurring trope in health policy debates around the world. Recent papers have argued that when it comes to major change to hospitals, "the public" cannot be persuaded by clinical evidence, and that mechanisms of public involvement are ill‐equipped to reconcile opposition with management desire for radical change. This paper presents data from in‐depth qualitative case studies of three hospital change processes in Scotland's National Health Service, including interviews with 44 members of the public. Informed by sociological accounts of both hospitals and publics as heterogeneous, shifting entities, I explore how hospitals play meaningful roles within their communities. I identify community responses to change proposals which go beyond simple opposition, including evading, engaging with and acquiescing to changes. Explicating both hospitals and the publics they serve as complex social phenomena strengthens the case for policy and practice to prioritise dialogic processes of engagement. It also demonstrates the continuing value of careful, empirical research into public perspectives on contentious healthcare issues in the context of everyday life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Mental health nursing in bushfire‐affected communities: An autoethnographic insight.
- Author
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Hayward, Brent A.
- Subjects
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WILDFIRES , *COMMUNITIES , *CONTENT analysis , *CONVALESCENCE , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *NURSING practice , *NURSING research , *NURSING models , *PHOTOGRAPHY , *PRACTICAL politics , *PSYCHIATRIC nursing , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *SOCIOLOGY , *QUALITATIVE research , *SOCIAL support , *MOBILE apps , *FIELD notes (Science) - Abstract
There is no literature to guide mental health nursing in bushfire‐affected communities. Using autoethnographic methods, the author reflects on his experience of mental health nursing during the Australian bushfires of 2019–20 and the challenges of identifying existing practice guidance. Applying an existing nursing model and insights from gestalt, he analyses his field notes to identify and describe practices which he found important and useful for working with bushfire‐affected persons and communities. Eight suggestions are provided to assist mental health nurses to practise in an informed way and promote recovery. This paper makes a contribution to a small body of existing mental health nursing research using autoethnographic methods, and it is the first contribution to the mental health nursing literature about working with bushfire‐affected persons and communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Athletes confessions: The sports biography as an interaction ritual.
- Author
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Thing, L. F. and Ronglan, L. T.
- Subjects
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BIOGRAPHY (Literary form) , *DOPING in sports , *EMOTIONS , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *SOCIOLOGY , *QUALITATIVE research , *PROFESSIONAL athletes , *THEMATIC analysis , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Commercialization of emotions is not a new phenomenon but in Denmark there is a new general trend to tell and sell personal stories in the media. Personal deprivation and crises are also major topics in sports media. This paper focuses on sports biographies as a book genre that is reviving in popularity. The paper approaches the topic through the biographies of one Danish athlete: the former professional cyclist, Jesper Skibby, who writes about his doping disclosure and shares his personal dilemmas as a former elite sportsman. The thematic text analysis orientates around social interactions, emotions, and personality constructions. Inspired by microsociology with a Durkheimian flavor of Goffman and Hochschild, themes including 'face work,' 'interaction rituals,' and 'emotions management' are discussed. The analysis claims that sharing personal information in the media is not only a means of confession and reclaiming status but is also business and management - on an intimate level. Telling the story of the corrosion of a sporting character has become a hot issue, an entertainment, and not least a commercial commitment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Reviewing studies with diverse designs: the development and evaluation of a new tool.
- Author
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Sirriyeh, Reema, Lawton, Rebecca, Gardner, Peter, and Armitage, Gerry
- Subjects
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QUALITY assurance , *RESEARCH , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care research , *NURSING research , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIOLOGY , *QUALITATIVE research , *QUANTITATIVE research , *INTER-observer reliability , *RESEARCH personnel , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *STANDARDS ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Rationale, aims & objective Tools for the assessment of the quality of research studies tend to be specific to a particular research design (e.g. randomized controlled trials, or qualitative interviews). This makes it difficult to assess the quality of a body of research that addresses the same or a similar research question but using different approaches. The aim of this paper is to describe the development and preliminary evaluation of a quality assessment tool that can be applied to a methodologically diverse set of research articles. Methods The 16-item quality assessment tool (QATSDD) was assessed to determine its reliability and validity when used by health services researchers in the disciplines of psychology, sociology and nursing. Qualitative feedback was also gathered from mixed-methods health researchers regarding the comprehension, content, perceived value and usability of the tool. Results Reference to existing widely used quality assessment tools and experts in systematic review confirmed that the components of the tool represented the construct of 'good research technique' being assessed. Face validity was subsequently established through feedback from a sample of nine health researchers. Inter-rater reliability was established through substantial agreement between three reviewers when applying the tool to a set of three research papers (κ = 71.5%), and good to substantial agreement between their scores at time 1 and after a 6-week interval at time 2 confirmed test-retest reliability. Conclusions The QATSDD shows good reliability and validity for use in the quality assessment of a diversity of studies, and may be an extremely useful tool for reviewers to standardize and increase the rigour of their assessments in reviews of the published papers which include qualitative and quantitative work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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6. Interpretive qualitative synthesis in the sport & exercise sciences: The meta-interpretation approach1.
- Author
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Weed, Mike
- Subjects
- *
QUALITATIVE research , *THEORY of knowledge , *PHYSICAL education , *SPORTS medicine , *SPORTS sciences , *META-analysis , *SOCIOLOGY , *STATISTICS , *EXERCISE - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to discuss the interpretive synthesis of qualitative research in the sport and exercise sciences. The paper discusses the “meta-interpretation” approach which attempts to maintain an interpretive epistemology congruent with the majority of primary qualitative research. The paper reviews and evaluates eight research methods or approaches that include some form of synthesis and that are and have been widely used in sport, health and exercise research (literature review, systematic review, meta-analysis, meta-ethnography, grounded theory, cross-case comparison, secondary analysis of primary data, and interpretive phenomenological analysis). The key features of each approach are drawn out, and their implications for the meta-interpretation approach are discussed. The paper then outlines the procedure for meta-interpretation before concluding with some comments on the functions of synthesis in general and meta-interpretation in particular. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Between disruption and continuity: challenges in maintaining the 'biographical we' when caring for a partner with a severe, chronic illness.
- Author
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Aasbø, Gunvor, Solbrække, Kari Nyheim, Kristvik, Ellen, and Werner, Anne
- Subjects
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OBSTRUCTIVE lung disease treatment , *CAREGIVERS , *CHRONIC diseases , *FAMILIES , *INTERVIEWING , *OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases , *MEDICAL care , *PATIENTS , *QUALITY of life , *SOCIOLOGY , *SPOUSES , *QUALITATIVE research , *HUMAN research subjects , *PATIENT selection , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ( COPD) is a progressive illness that changes the lives of patients and their spouses dramatically. The aim of this paper is to show how spouses of COPD patients integrate their tasks as informal carers with their role as spouses and the tensions and challenges involved in this. The study draws on qualitative interviews with spouses of COPD patients, recruited from the patient pool of ambulatory pulmonary services of two hospitals in Oslo, Norway. The spouses described their great efforts to re-establish normality and continuity in their everyday lives. Accomplishing this was a delicate process because they faced several dilemmas in this work. They balanced the need to sustain the independence and integrity of both parties against the need to ensure safety and deal with the progression of the illness. We propose 'biographical we' as a concept that can highlight the great effort spouses put into establishing a sense of continuity in their lives. In times when healthcare policy involves mobilising informal caregiving resources, an awareness of the complexity of caregiving relationships is crucial when developing appropriate support for informal carers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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8. Conducting case study research in occupational therapy.
- Author
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Salminen, Anna-Liisa, Harra, Toini, and Lautamo, Tiina
- Subjects
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PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *SOCIAL science research , *PSYCHOLOGY , *CLINICAL psychology , *SOCIAL psychology , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Case study research has been used increasingly in psychology and sociology in recent years. It provides researchers with an opportunity to explore a situation involving one individual or several individuals over time from multiple points of view. Methods: This literature review explains case study research as a method and summerises its scientific merit, also providing an example of its use. Results: Case study research offers occupational therapists a scientific methodology that can be used to understand and develop occupational therapy practice. Conclusion: This paper argues that case study research should be used more extensively by occupational therapists as the method respects the basic principles of occupational therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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9. A new political arithmetic to make sociology useful? Comments on a debate.
- Author
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Hammersley, Martyn
- Subjects
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POLICY sciences , *SOCIAL problems , *SOCIAL history , *QUALITATIVE research , *QUANTITATIVE research , *SOCIOLOGY , *SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
This paper comments on an article by Lauder, Brown, and Halsey, that deals on a political arithmetic to make sociology useful. These are some of the significant issues raised in the article: 1) relationship between social science and policymaking; 2) association between quantitative and qualitative approaches in social science, and; 3) need for policy research to draw on many disciplines. However, while raising important questions, there are some major uncertainties surrounding the authors' argument. They announce that they are to advance the position that sociology needs to develop an approach to research which focuses on fundamental social problems. But what they are proposing is not really new, since much sociological research has been concerned with fundamental social problems.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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