2017
DOI: 10.7748/nr.2017.e1472
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A beginner’s guide to ethnographic observation in nursing research

Abstract: Background Observation is mentioned in most ethnographic textbooks, but specific details about how it should be conducted and the practicalities to be considered in ethnographic nursing research are not always explicit. This paper explores the experiences of and challenges faced by a novice nurse researcher who used observation to collect data.Aim To provide a novice researcher's perspective of observation in ethnographic nursing research and to highlight the associated challenges.Discussion Challenges that ar… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…The participants in each focus group were presented with four scenarios based on 40 hr of direct nonparticipant observations of actual care provision, across four different ward areas in the healthcare facility. These observations occurred during the first stage of this research (see Conroy ()). These scenarios were used to encourage the participants to draw on their own experiences to explore the factors they felt were influencing the care described in the scenario (Jenkins, Bloor, Fischer, Berney, & Neale, ).…”
Section: Methods and Designmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…The participants in each focus group were presented with four scenarios based on 40 hr of direct nonparticipant observations of actual care provision, across four different ward areas in the healthcare facility. These observations occurred during the first stage of this research (see Conroy ()). These scenarios were used to encourage the participants to draw on their own experiences to explore the factors they felt were influencing the care described in the scenario (Jenkins, Bloor, Fischer, Berney, & Neale, ).…”
Section: Methods and Designmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…Before starting the observations, an observation guide was developed based on an earlier work by Conroy (). This guide provided prompts for information about the observed events, such as the location, date, time and specification of basic care needs, and was used during the observations for recording field notes.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Depending on what is intended to be analyzed, observation and participation in the field are central characteristics of ethnographic approaches (46,49,62) . Immersion in the scenario seeks an investigation and observation of local language, behaviors, codes and values, assisting in recognizing social practices and processes which develop in a routine, repeated and standardized way as they are accepted and rooted in the social group as cultural elements, thereby constituting objects of analysis and being amenable to second-order interpretations (48)(49)(50) .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%