Participants' use of enacted scenes in research interviews: A method for reflexive analysis in health and social care

Social Science & Medicine
Deborah Michelle JamesLuke Collins

Abstract

In our study of a workforce intervention within a health and social care context we found that participants who took part in longitudinal research interviews were commonly enacting scenes from their work during one-to-one interviews. Scenes were defined as portions of the interviews in which participants directly quoted the speech of at least two actors. Our analysis in this paper focuses on these enacted scenes, and compares the content of them before and after the intervention. We found that, whilst the tensions between consistency and change, and change management, were common topics for scene enactment in both pre and post-intervention data, following the intervention participants were much more likely to present themselves as active agents in that change. Post-intervention enacted scenes also showed participants' reports of taking a service user perspective, and a focus on their interactions with service users that had been absent from pre-intervention data. In addition, descriptions of positive feeling and emotions were present in the post-intervention enacted scenes. We suggest that this analysis confirms the importance of enacted scenes as an analytic resource, and that this importance goes beyond their utility in ident...Continue Reading

References

Aug 12, 2009·Journal of Pain & Palliative Care Pharmacotherapy·UNKNOWN National Institute of Neurological Disorders, National Institutes of Health
Mar 17, 2015·Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities : JARID·Deborah Michelle JamesWill McGovern

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Citations

May 13, 2020·World Psychiatry : Official Journal of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA)·Wayne Hall, Michael Lynskey
Feb 12, 2019·Qualitative Health Research·Laura ThompsonAnna Madill
Mar 24, 2021·Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities : JARID·Deborah Michelle JamesSharon Vincent

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