Integrating qualitative research into occupational health: a case study among hospital workers
Publication type
  
            
                        Journal article
      
      
  
    Date published
  
            
                        2005 Apr 01
      
      
  
    Journal 
  
            
                        Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
      
      
  
    Volume
  
            
                        47
      
      
  
    Issue
  
            
                        4
      
      
  
    Pages
  
            
                        399-409
      
      
  
    PMID
  
            
                        15824632
      
      
  
    Open Access?
  
            
                        No
      
      
  
    Abstract
  
            
                        OBJECTIVE: We sought to better use qualitative approaches in occupational health research and integrate them with quantitative methods. METHODS: We systematically reviewed, selected, and adapted qualitative research methods as part of a multisite study of the predictors and outcomes of work-related musculoskeletal disorders among hospital workers in two large urban tertiary hospitals. RESULTS: The methods selected included participant observation; informal, open-ended, and semistructured interviews with individuals or small groups; and archival study. The nature of the work and social life of the hospitals and the foci of the study all favored using more participant observation methods in the case study than initially anticipated. CONCLUSIONS: Exploiting the full methodological spectrum of qualitative methods in occupational health is increasingly relevant. Although labor-intensive, these approaches may increase the yield of established quantitative approaches otherwise used in isolation