"Mixing" in mixed methods is more than just the combination of 2 independent components of the quantitative and qualitative data. The use of "mixing" procedure in health services research involves the integration, connection, and embedding of these 2 data components.
Despite the use of quantitative and qualitative data in trauma research and therapy, mixed methods studies in this field have not been analyzed to help researchers designing investigations. This discussion begins by reviewing four core characteristics of mixed methods research in the social and human sciences. Combining these characteristics, the authors focus on four select mixed methods designs that are applicable in trauma research. These designs are defined and their essential elements noted. Applying these designs to trauma research, a search was conducted to locate mixed methods trauma studies. From this search, one sample study was selected, and its characteristics of mixed methods procedures noted. Finally, drawing on other mixed methods designs available, several follow-up mixed methods studies were described for this sample study, enabling trauma researchers to view design options for applying mixed methods research in trauma investigations.
Evidence for disparities due to geographic access and socioeconomic factors warrant increased efforts to remove systemic and structural barriers. Future research should focus on exploring and evaluating potential policy and practice interventions to improve the quality of life among elderly cancer survivors living in rural communities and those from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds.
Most evidence-based autism spectrum disorder (ASD) interventions are tested with primarily White, mid-upper class, English-speaking populations, despite the increase in Latino children with ASD in early intervention programs throughout the United States. Unfortunately, interventions that are incongruent with a target population's culture may be relatively ineffective. This mixed-methods study explored how culturally appropriate, feasible, and acceptable Latino caregivers perceived intervention models, strategies, and targets. Survey data were compared for 28 Latino and 27 non-Latino White parents of young children with ASD. Further, 20 Latino caregivers participated in focus groups to describe their challenges, perspectives and preferences for intervention strategies and models, and unmet needs from providers. These findings underscore the need for culturally modified interventions for Latino children and families.
Restricted and repetitive behaviors (RRBs) are a core feature of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), however, research on the functional impact of these behaviors on the quality of life for individuals with ASD and their families remains scarce. We conducted focus groups with parents of children with ASD and clinicians in order to better characterize the functional impact of behavioral inflexibility (BI), which represents one potential dimensional construct that could account for the breadth of behaviors comprising the RRB domain. Transcripts of the focus groups were analyzed using qualitative analysis coding methods to determine parent and clinician beliefs on a range of issues related to BI including overall impact, types of child behaviors, and strategies for managing BI. Thematic analysis revealed that parents and clinicians view BI as an important behavior that impacts multiple areas of functioning, relates to other RRBs as well as social communication behaviors, and warrants targeted treatment. Notably, many parents and clinicians emphasized some positive consequences of BI as well. These findings add crucial insights into the functional impact of BI and RRBs as a whole, and suggest that BI represents an important avenue for future research.
Race, age, and rural residence were related to CVD risk factors among low-income women in Nebraska. The effect of program eligibility requirements as a barrier to return visits should be more closely examined, and strategies to facilitate repeat screenings on WISEWOMAN projects should be undertaken. Additionally, women on the lower end of the socioeconomic spectrum were less likely to return for repeat visits, suggesting that further investigation is needed to understand why these women fail to return for screening services.
Using data from the 2002 Nationwide Inpatient Sample of the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project, we examined the magnitude, variation, and determinants of rural hospital resource utilization associated with hospitalizations due to ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSCs). An estimated $9.5 billion in charges incurred in rural hospitals nationwide in 2002 was found to be associated with hospitalizations due to ACSCs. Our findings suggest that the smaller a rural hospital, the greater the portion of its financial resources used to treat patients with ACSC. Regional variation in ACSC-related hospital charges is generally consistent with the geographic variation in the population's economic status and primary care physician supply-residents of the South region have the poorest access to primary healthcare. In summary, smaller rural communities spend more of their healthcare resources on avoidable hospital inpatient care than do larger rural communities, leaving smaller rural communities potentially fewer resources to spend on preventive and primary healthcare. Health intervention programs and health policies should be designed to increase access to and utilization of appropriate preventive and primary healthcare in rural areas, especially in small and remote communities.
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