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HSERV 526

HSERV 526. Qualitative Research in Public Health Stephen Bezruchka TA: Anthony Sok-Heng Tessandori. Qualitative Research in Public Health. Understanding a culture by getting to know it personally, rather than counting/measuring aspects of it

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HSERV 526

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  1. HSERV 526 Qualitative Research in Public Health Stephen Bezruchka TA: Anthony Sok-Heng Tessandori

  2. Qualitative Research in Public Health Understanding a culture by getting to know it personally, rather than counting/measuring aspects of it Leads to hypotheses that can be investigated by quantitative techniques Rigor and validity in qualitative research Cultural familiarity respect for adherents adherents respecting you

  3. Qualitative Research: soft science?

  4. Health Services Department Social and Behavioral Sciences track COMPETENCIES

  5. Qualitative Competencies document review, qualitative research, instrument development, direct observation, informant interviews, focus groups, formal methods describe complementary features and appropriate integration of qualitative and quantitative approaches to research regarding health problems of a population epistemological toolbox to view social phenomena & gain insight into meanings and actions subjectivity, reflexivity, ethnography, epistemology, deconstruction, position and voice classify the types of findings produced by different levels of data synthesis and interpretation bias: how the researcher’s sociocultural position affects the questions asked, methods of data collection, interpretation and dissemination ways to increase trustworthiness of the qualitative process and findings write a methods section for a proposal methods: • content analysis thematic description grounded theory Phenomenology Hermeneutics Discourse analysis Narrative analysis Ethnography

  6. Other Qualitative Research Courses Seminar in Advanced Qualitative Methods James Pfeiffer, Autumn 2006, Hserv 590 • Theoretical foundations, in-depth analysis and use of computers (ATLAS ti) Interpretive methods (phenomenology, narrative analysis, and grounded theory) Helene Starks, Winter 2006, Medical History Ethics MHE 497

  7. Learning Objectives for this session review syllabus describe the terms emic and etic list methods of qualitative investigations discuss possible research questions and choosing teams recount the attributes of a cultural domain Examples of qualitative research and relationship to quantitative work

  8. Handouts • Course schedule with exercise due dates • Syllabus with readings • Exercises

  9. SIGN THE SHEET BEING HANDED OUT • Those taking course for credit only

  10. WORK of course Overview of many methods Attending lectures Rapid pace, INTERRUPT Exercises in class Group project Individual exercises Group presentation and report Extra session needed as a group

  11. Grading • Exercises (12 each) • Project report (20) • Project Presentation (20)

  12. Lecture noteshttp://courses.washington.edu/hserv526/ Coursereadings Course Packet Rams Copy Center 4144 Univ Way NE Recording of lectures

  13. Textbooks Required: -Bernard Research methods in Anthropology (2006) or 2002 Third Edition • Ulin, P. R., E. T. Robinson, et al. (2005). Qualitative Methods: A field guide for applied research. San Francisco, Jossey-Bass. Recommended • Krueger, Focus Groups • LeCompte Ethnographer's Toolkit • Morse Qual. Res Methods for Health Prof. • Scrimshaw RAP • Spradley Ethnographic Interview

  14. TODAY’S READING Body Ritual Among the Nacirema In course packet

  15. Past Students suggest • Focus on techniques in exercises, not research question • Coding is important • Much of material is "common sense" • Why do it? See flaws in outsiders programs • when you listen to what someone says or watch what they do, you learn much about that setting that you won’t see from counting how many people came to the health center

  16. PROJECTS • PAST YEAR'S Titles in today' syllabus • PAST YEAR'S Reports on reserve in library • Guidelines: no sensitive topics, receptive population, everyone mentally competent, adult, easily accessible, 5 minute rule, focused topic • Groups with non-native English speakers to have one native English speaker

  17. Past Projects UW Cultures student groups: smokers, Muslims, international, activists specific settings: computer labs, instructional center, WAC, IMA, museums specific employee groups: IMA, copy workers, food service workers, janitors, bus drivers Others Near UW cultures: Agua Verde workers, Ave street people, tanners, Greenlake walkers, movie goers, bus riders Stress-related: pool players, computer lab noise, relationships, knitting Health related Seattle groups:p-patch gardening

  18. Project suggestions (my interests) • Perceptions of progress? US relative health decline • Beliefs about dominant ideology (if you work hard, you will succeed, so America's system in which there is a big gap is necessary for our society to function best • Student beliefs about equality and equity • Faculty beliefs about distributive justice • Beliefs about whether rich people's health is worse off with more inequality?

  19. NEXT SESSION (THURSDAY) Think of questions/topics for study TODAY FILL OUT THE FORM including TIMES TALK TO OTHERS ABOUT FORMING A GROUP Your email to Anthony by WEDS NOON should include the contents of the six columns NO LATE SUBMISSIONS Anthony will collate them all and email them to everyone by Wednesday10 PM to help you decide THURSDAY we will form groups

  20. EMAIL TO BE SENT TO Anthony see syllabus PLUS MEETING TIMES Specific Topic EXAMPLE Discrimination of wheelchair users in Health Sciences Center or in community YOUR TOPIC Population to studyEXAMPLE Users of wheelchairs YOUR POPULATION Specific place to access population EXAMPLE University Hospital 3rd floor entry YOUR PLACE TO ACCESS Specific site for direct observationEXAMPLE Wheelchair users as they arrive at the hospital YOUR OBSERVATION SITE Informant Interview focusEXAMPLE What is it like as you go from home to the hospital? YOUR INTERVIEW FOCUS Participant Observation ActivityEXAMPLE Spend an hour in a wheelchair in the University Hospital complex YOUR PARTIPANT ACTIVITY NAME______, PHONE NUMBER _________

  21. CRUCIAL STEP BEFORE THURSDAY (AFTER SENDING YOUR EMAILED EXERCISE PROBLEM • Study the email Anthony sends with the projects people have thought of, serial numbered to identify them (Wednesday 10 pm) • Rank the ones you are interested in working in, and bring the top three to Thursday's class • Look at the times for possible meeting on that project, and don't rank them if the meeting time suggested is not possible for you.

  22. Qualitative Research - try to understand how communities perceive a concept that is a part of their culture INHERENTLY POLITICAL

  23. QUALITATIVE RESEARCH • OBSERVATION, • INFORMANT INTERVIEWS, • formal methods (free list, pile sort) • FOCUS GROUPS • PARTICIPATORY METHODS • RAP (similar to fast food) • CODING, ANALYSIS

  24. Qualitative Research • Iterative • Cyclical • Refinement of focus • Flexible • Triangulation

  25. COMPARING QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS QUALITATIVE QUANTITATIVE GENERAL Perspective insider's (emic) outsider's (etic) exploratory confirmatory Hypothesis generating testing METHODS words numbers Structured less (a continuum) more Why questions fewer more more less Dynamic SAMPLING number small large depth more less purposeful or 'random' random type CONTEXT more less ( style or Richness manner of multiple methods single method data collection)

  26. WHY STUDY HOW TO LEARN ABOUT A CULTURE? • Many problems today stem from not respecting OTHER cultural values • need to get an emic perspective of a culture (population) • tools to do that are taught in this course • in the process of learning about that culture, you begin to respect it • then holders of the culture begin to respect you • you can begin to work together to make positive changes

  27. CULTURE • “knowledge that people learn as part of a group that is used to interpret experience and generate social behavior” • elements include • shared, collective • systematic, organized • both explicit and implicit elements • variability across population

  28. "Culture is a way of life shared by the members of one group but not necessarily with the members or other groups of the same species. It covers knowledge, habits, and skills, including underlying tendencies and preferences, derived from exposure to and learning from others. Whenever systematic variation in knowledge, habits, and skills between groups cannot be attributed to genetic or ecological factors, it is probably cultural. The way individuals learn from each other is secondary, but that they learn from each other is a requirement. Thus, the "culture" label does not apply to knowledge, habits or skills that individuals readily acquire on their own." Frans de Waal The Ape and the Sushi Master

  29. Cultural attributes • “cultural consensus”, shared among people in the same group • holistic, interconnected, usually studied by long intensive field studies, seeing how things relate in broad patterns • aspects are overt or covert • people within the culture may not want to tell you, or can’t generate the answer • differences in way behavior is organized and characterized

  30. Cultural differences • Man in hospital with ventricular tachycardia • Baby massaged with ghee in cold after delivery • bikas

  31. emic etic Insider’s perspective

  32. CULTURE • Hard to describe one's culture • Understanding another culture is difficult • How do you learn about cultures?

  33. CULTURAL DOMAINS • defined as category of cultural meaning that includes other cultural categories, (from an emic perspective), • domain can be related to a place/location (e.g. school or clinic), a concept (diarrhea, food flexibility), material things (medicines, cars), or people (shamans, gypsies, nuns) • Cognitive Anthropology (semantic distinctions) • Componential analysis (building blocks of meaning in semantics)

  34. Domain attributes • cover term (that indicates a category of cultural knowledge) words used in plural • tree • illnesses that women get in a village in Nepal • included terms (at least 2, that are the elements that comprise a domain) • oak, yew, pine, maple • mutu khane

  35. Domain attributes • semantic relationship where all included terms are related to cover term in same way • pine and maple are “kinds of trees” • mutu khane is an illness that women get in Nepal • DOMAINS ARE NOT THEMES • (Spradley reading on themes in packet) • comes out in Analysis later

  36. Domain attributes • boundaries: certain things are not part of that domain • a tulip is not within the domain of a tree • e.g. sunburn is not an illness that women in a village get in Nepal • OFTEN/USUALLY, domains are not found in many qualitative studies

  37. Cultural Domain Research Topic included terms Student Eating Habits on Campus Healthy Foods Convenience Foods Unhealthy Foods

  38. Domain analysis • Read interview texts • Look for names of things (esp. plural) • See if one of names could be cover term • Name used for more than one thing • Name could be used as “kind of” • Others become included terms • Semantic relationships • Boundary

  39. Class exercise • Take notes on interview of TA by instructor • Look for included terms • Cover term • Semantic relationship • Boundary

  40. Cultural Domain People who Scuba Dive included terms Scuba Diving ??????????? %%%%%%%%%% ##########

  41. EXAMPLES: Qualitative studies STD’s in minority women prevention trial (reading packet) • Behavioral intervention based on knowledge of cultural beliefs produced large decline in re-infection rate

  42. 18 months of qual. research • Create culture- and sex- specific small-group interventions • Af Am & Mex Am fe. • 2 groups randomized • 1 group standard counseling • 1 group culture specific counseling

  43. AIDS Risk reduction model Pre-tested with 13 groups (85) women

  44. Summary of session • Qualitative and quantitative methods are complementary • Cultural domains are a useful way to understand how groups organize words

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