Direct observation methods: A practical guide for health researchers

To provide health research teams with a practical, methodologically rigorous guide on how to conduct direct observation. Synthesis of authors’ observation-based teaching and research experiences in social sciences and health services research. This article serves as a guide for making key decisions...

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Published inPEC innovation Vol. 1; p. 100036
Main Authors Fix, Gemmae M., Kim, Bo, Ruben, Mollie A., McCullough, Megan B.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.12.2022
Elsevier
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ISSN2772-6282
2772-6282
DOI10.1016/j.pecinn.2022.100036

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Summary:To provide health research teams with a practical, methodologically rigorous guide on how to conduct direct observation. Synthesis of authors’ observation-based teaching and research experiences in social sciences and health services research. This article serves as a guide for making key decisions in studies involving direct observation. Study development begins with determining if observation methods are warranted or feasible. Deciding what and how to observe entails reviewing literature and defining what abstract, theoretically informed concepts look like in practice. Data collection tools help systematically record phenomena of interest. Interdisciplinary teams--that include relevant community members-- increase relevance, rigor and reliability, distribute work, and facilitate scheduling. Piloting systematizes data collection across the team and proactively addresses issues. Observation can elucidate phenomena germane to healthcare research questions by adding unique insights. Careful selection and sampling are critical to rigor. Phenomena like taboo behaviors or rare events are difficult to capture. A thoughtful protocol can preempt Institutional Review Board concerns. This novel guide provides a practical adaptation of traditional approaches to observation to meet contemporary healthcare research teams’ needs. [Display omitted] •Health research study designs benefit from observations of behaviors and contexts•Direct observation methods have a long history in the social sciences•Social science approaches should be adapted for health researchers’ unique needs•Health research observations should be feasible, well-defined and piloted•Multidisciplinary teams, data collection tools and detailed protocols enhance rigor
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Joint first authors.
ISSN:2772-6282
2772-6282
DOI:10.1016/j.pecinn.2022.100036