Can rapid approaches to qualitative analysis deliver timely, valid findings to clinical leaders? A mixed methods study comparing rapid and thematic analysis
Citation
Beck Taylor, Catherine Henshall, Sara Kenyon, Ian Litchfield, Sheila Greenfield. Can rapid approaches to qualitative analysis deliver timely, valid findings to clinical leaders? A mixed methods study comparing rapid and thematic analysis. BMJ Open 2018;8:e019993
Abstract
Objectives: This study compares rapid and traditional
analyses of a UK health service evaluation dataset to
explore differences in researcher time and consistency of
outputs.
Design: Mixed methods study, quantitatively and
qualitatively comparing qualitative methods.
Setting Data from a home birth service evaluation study
in a hospital in the English National Health Service, which
took place between October and December 2014. Two
research teams independently analysed focus group
and interview transcript data: one team used a thematic
analysis approach using the framework method, and the
second used rapid analysis.
Participants Home birth midwives (6), midwifery support
workers (4), commissioners (4), managers (6), and
community midwives (12) and a patient representative (1)
participated in the original study.
Primary outcome measures Time taken to complete
analysis in person hours; analysis findings and
recommendations matched, partially matched or not
matched across the two teams.
Results: Rapid analysis data management took less
time than thematic analysis (43 hours vs 116.5 hours).
Rapid analysis took 100 hours, and thematic analysis took
126.5 hours in total, with interpretation and write up taking
much longer in the rapid analysis (52 hours vs 8 hours).
Rapid analysis findings overlapped with 79% of thematic
analysis findings, and thematic analysis overlapped
with 63% of the rapid analysis findings. Rapid analysis
recommendations overlapped with 55% of those from the
thematic analysis, and thematic analysis overlapped with
59% of the rapid analysis recommendations.
Conclusions: Rapid analysis delivered a modest time
saving. Excessive time to interpret data in rapid analysis
in this study may be due to differences between research
teams. There was overlap in outputs between approaches,
more in findings than recommendations. Rapid
analysis may have the potential to deliver valid, timely
findings while taking less time. We recommend further
comparisons using additional data sets with more similar
research teams.
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