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Shedding the cobra effect: problematising thematic emergence, triangulation, saturation and member checking.

TLDR
Some HPE scholars have begun to use terms in qualitative publications without critically reflecting on: (i) their ontological and epistemological roots; (ii) their definitions, or (iii) their implications.
Abstract
Context Qualitative research is widely accepted as a legitimate approach to inquiry in health professions education (HPE). To secure this status, qualitative researchers have developed a variety of strategies (e.g. reliance on post-positivist qualitative methodologies, use of different rhetorical techniques, etc.) to facilitate the acceptance of their research methodologies and methods by the HPE community. Although these strategies have supported the acceptance of qualitative research in HPE, they have also brought about some unintended consequences. One of these consequences is that some HPE scholars have begun to use terms in qualitative publications without critically reflecting on: (i) their ontological and epistemological roots; (ii) their definitions, or (iii) their implications. Objectives In this paper, we share our critical reflections on four qualitative terms popularly used in the HPE literature: thematic emergence; triangulation; saturation, and member checking. Methods We discuss the methodological origins of these terms and the applications supported by these origins. We reflect critically on how these four terms became expected of qualitative research in HPE, and we reconsider their meanings and use by drawing on the broader qualitative methodology literature. Conclusions Through this examination, we hope to encourage qualitative scholars in HPE to avoid using qualitative terms uncritically and non-reflexively.

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Citations
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“Just give them a choice”: Patients' perspectives on starting medications for opioid use disorder in the ED

TL;DR: Patient perspectives regarding the initiation of buprenorphine and methadone in the ED are explored with the goal of improving interactions and fostering shared decision making (SDM) around these important treatment options.

Strategies Nonprofit Leaders Use to Achieve Financial Stability Through Sustainable Funding

TL;DR: Leaders of nonprofit organizations could use the findings of this study to provide comprehensive services that result in improved living and economic conditions in the communities they serve through implementing strategies for sustainable funding to meet the mission of their organizations.
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"We’ve been taught to understand that we don’t have anything to contribute towards knowledge": Exploring Academics’ understanding of decolonising curricula in higher education

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the academic understanding of decolonizing curricula in South African higher education and found that academia largely understand the decolonising of curricula as responding to the need to tackle and explicate the Eurocentric thought in curricula; re-centring African epistemic traditions and navigating what they refer to as the confusion, ambiguity and the discomfort of decolonialisation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Attitudes Towards Physicians Requiring Remediation: One-of-Us or Not-Like-Us?

TL;DR: The medical profession's attitude towards those who struggle with clinical competency-as individuals and as a whole-is ambivalent at best and the profession needs to address this ambivalence and its underlying causes to contend with the challenge of remediating practicing physicians.

An Urban Mid-Western Adult Education Program: Perspectives of Stakeholders.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a study on the causes for dropping out of school and the barriers that prevent adults from returning to school and recommend improvements to adult education programs. But, the study is limited in scope.
References
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Book

Discovery of Grounded Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research

TL;DR: The Discovery of Grounded Theory as mentioned in this paper is a book about the discovery of grounded theories from data, both substantive and formal, which is a major task confronting sociologists and is understandable to both experts and laymen.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ): a 32-item checklist for interviews and focus groups

TL;DR: The criteria included in COREQ, a 32-item checklist, can help researchers to report important aspects of the research team, study methods, context of the study, findings, analysis and interpretations.
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