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Worked examples of alternative methods for the synthesis of qualitative and quantitative research in systematic reviews

Worked examples of alternative methods for the synthesis of qualitative and quantitative research in systematic reviews
Worked examples of alternative methods for the synthesis of qualitative and quantitative research in systematic reviews
BACKGROUND: The inclusion of qualitative studies in systematic reviews poses methodological challenges. This paper presents worked examples of two methods of data synthesis (textual narrative and thematic), used in relation to one review, with the aim of enabling researchers to consider the strength of different approaches. METHODS: A systematic review of lay perspectives of infant size and growth was conducted, locating 19 studies (including both qualitative and quantitative). The data extracted from these were synthesised using both a textual narrative and a thematic synthesis. RESULTS: The processes of both methods are presented, showing a stepwise progression to the final synthesis. Both methods led us to similar conclusions about lay views toward infant size and growth. Differences between methods lie in the way they dealt with study quality and heterogeneity. CONCLUSION: On the basis of the work reported here, we consider textual narrative and thematic synthesis have strengths and weaknesses in relation to different research questions. Thematic synthesis holds most potential for hypothesis generation, but may obscure heterogeneity and quality appraisal. Textual narrative synthesis is better able to describe the scope of existing research and account for the strength of evidence, but is less good at identifying commonality.
1471-2288
Lucas, Patricia J.
1d64fb4f-1f3c-4337-bab2-03c98d24bf79
Baird, Janis
f4bf2039-6118-436f-ab69-df8b4d17f824
Arai, Lisa
c7139c93-237d-4aca-986f-4415df57197b
Law, Catherine
b90db04a-7a74-4211-8409-5aad234bca91
Roberts, Helen M.
a1026190-34cb-4e21-a73d-2df030b1fed9
Lucas, Patricia J.
1d64fb4f-1f3c-4337-bab2-03c98d24bf79
Baird, Janis
f4bf2039-6118-436f-ab69-df8b4d17f824
Arai, Lisa
c7139c93-237d-4aca-986f-4415df57197b
Law, Catherine
b90db04a-7a74-4211-8409-5aad234bca91
Roberts, Helen M.
a1026190-34cb-4e21-a73d-2df030b1fed9

Lucas, Patricia J., Baird, Janis, Arai, Lisa, Law, Catherine and Roberts, Helen M. (2007) Worked examples of alternative methods for the synthesis of qualitative and quantitative research in systematic reviews. BMC Medical Research Methodology, 7. (doi:10.1186/1471-2288-7-4).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The inclusion of qualitative studies in systematic reviews poses methodological challenges. This paper presents worked examples of two methods of data synthesis (textual narrative and thematic), used in relation to one review, with the aim of enabling researchers to consider the strength of different approaches. METHODS: A systematic review of lay perspectives of infant size and growth was conducted, locating 19 studies (including both qualitative and quantitative). The data extracted from these were synthesised using both a textual narrative and a thematic synthesis. RESULTS: The processes of both methods are presented, showing a stepwise progression to the final synthesis. Both methods led us to similar conclusions about lay views toward infant size and growth. Differences between methods lie in the way they dealt with study quality and heterogeneity. CONCLUSION: On the basis of the work reported here, we consider textual narrative and thematic synthesis have strengths and weaknesses in relation to different research questions. Thematic synthesis holds most potential for hypothesis generation, but may obscure heterogeneity and quality appraisal. Textual narrative synthesis is better able to describe the scope of existing research and account for the strength of evidence, but is less good at identifying commonality.

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Published date: 2007

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 61343
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/61343
ISSN: 1471-2288
PURE UUID: 003e8d05-90c3-4a47-9e34-13e833b4ac66
ORCID for Janis Baird: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4039-4361

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Date deposited: 29 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:29

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Contributors

Author: Patricia J. Lucas
Author: Janis Baird ORCID iD
Author: Lisa Arai
Author: Catherine Law
Author: Helen M. Roberts

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