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9780198530251

Research Methods in Palliative Care

by ; ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780198530251

  • ISBN10:

    0198530250

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2007-06-28
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

Second author, Eduardo Bruera, is with the Univ. of Texas, Houston. Provides an introduction to the palliative care use of clinical trials, survey research, epidemiological research methods, and qualitative research methods. Topics include ethical and practical issues in designing and conduction clinical trials in palliative care, and more. For researchers. Softcover.

Author Biography


Professor Julia M Addington-Hall joined the School of Nursing and Midwifery, Southampton University as Professor in End of Life Care in 2004. She now heads the Cancer, Palliative and End of Life Care Research Group. Her current research programmes include palliative care beyond cancer (including stroke, heart failure and MND); depression at the end of life; the development and validation of an after-death questionnaire for bereaved people (VOICES), and evaluating health and social care services for people in the last months of life. She is co-Director of the new 'Cancer Experiences Collaborative' (CECo), funded by the UK National Cancer Research Institute. She is Chair of the UK Palliative Care Research Society. She is an editor of the journal 'Palliative Medicine', and a member of the editorial board of 'Journal of Pain and Symptom Control'. She has lectured extensively in the UK and abroad.
Dr. Eduardo Bruera currently holds the F.T. McGraw Chair in the Treatment of Cancer and Chair of the Department of Palliative Care and Rehabilitation Medicine. He previously worked at the University of Alberta, helping to develop the Division of Palliative Care Medicine and the Edmonton Regional Palliative Care Program. Among his research interests are cancer pain, cachexia, fatigue, delirium, communication, and outcomes research in palliative care. He has a strong interest in the global development of palliative care and has collaborated for many years with the World Health Organization/Pan American Health Organization and served as Chair of the International Association of Hospice and Palliative Care (IAHPC) between 2000 and 2004. In addition to having published more than 700 papers, abstracts, and book chapters, Dr. Bruera has trained hundreds of physicians who are currently practicing palliative care around the world. Professor Irene Higginson is particularly known for her development of methods to assess the quality and outcomes of palliative care, evaluation of treatments and epidemiologically based assessment of problems and need in cancer and non-cancer. She has developed undergraduate and postgraduate education programmes for doctors, nurses and other professions, including a multi-professional Masters programme for the leaders in palliative care for the future. Irene Higginson has published widely on palliative care, quality of life measurement, and evaluation of services and therapies, in scientific journals and in textbooks. She has developed and validated two tools used widely in the UK and many other countries to help in the assessment of patients and families and in the quality of care, led the evidence review for the NICE guidance on Supportive and Palliative Care, and the WHO new guidance on Better Palliative Care for Older People. Professor Sheila Payne is a health psychologist with a background in nursing. She holds the Help the Hospices Chair in Hospice Studies based at the Institute of Health Research and works in collaboration with the International Observatory on End of Life Care at Lancaster University. Professor Payne has a long track record in palliative care research and scholarship. She previously led the Palliative and End-of-Life Care Research Group at the University of Sheffield. Her research agenda focuses on palliative and end-of-life care for older people and bereavement support. She holds a number of major grants in these areas and supervises PhD students. She co-directs the NCRI funded Cancer Experiences Collaborative with Professor Addington-Hall. Sheila has published widely in academic and professional journals, written ten books, and edits the 'Health Psychology' book series published by the Open University Press with Sandra Horn.

Table of Contents

List of contributorsp. xi
Introductionp. 1
The challenges of palliative care researchp. 2
Ethical issuesp. 4
Outline of the bookp. 7
Conclusionp. 8
Referencesp. 8
Clinical trials
Principles of designing clinical trials in palliative carep. 13
Introductionp. 13
Clinical trial terminologyp. 13
Basics of clinical trial designp. 16
Randomizationp. 19
Blindingp. 22
Determining sample size of a clinical trialp. 23
Conclusionp. 25
Referencesp. 26
Ethical and practical issues in designing and conducting clinical trials in palliative carep. 27
Introductionp. 27
Ethical issuesp. 28
Practical issuesp. 33
Administrative issuesp. 37
Referencesp. 38
Survey research
Survey designp. 45
Introductionp. 45
What is survey research?p. 45
Samplingp. 46
Probability sampling proceduresp. 49
Sampling errorp. 52
Sampling sizep. 53
Response ratep. 55
Non-probability sampling proceduresp. 57
Conclusionp. 59
Referencesp. 59
Survey research: methods of data collection, questionnaire design and pilotingp. 61
Introductionp. 61
Methods of data collectionp. 61
Conducting personal and telephone interview surveysp. 65
Conducting postal surveysp. 68
The design of survey instrumentsp. 71
Testing survey instrumentsp. 78
Conclusionp. 80
Referencesp. 81
Epidemiological research methods
Experimental and quasi-experimental designsp. 85
Introductionp. 85
Types of study designp. 86
Observational studiesp. 86
Quasi-experimental studiesp. 92
Conclusionsp. 95
Referencesp. 96
Outcome measurementp. 99
What do we mean by outcome measures?p. 99
Why should outcomes be measured in research?p. 100
Issues in choosing an outcome measure for a studyp. 100
Moving to a more person-centred and individualized approach in measuring outcomesp. 103
Choice of generic or specific outcome and quality of life measuresp. 104
What about developing country contexts?p. 108
Conclusionp. 110
Referencesp. 110
Systematic reviewsp. 115
What is a systematic review?p. 115
Why do systematic reviews?p. 116
Are systematic reviews relevant in palliative care?p. 117
When not to do a systematic reviewp. 117
When systematic reviews are usefulp. 118
Defining the aims and questionsp. 118
Systematic review methodsp. 119
Systematic review methods for qualitative studiesp. 132
Conclusionp. 134
Referencesp. 134
Qualitative research methods
Qualitative methods of data collection and analysisp. 139
Introductionp. 139
What are qualitative methods?p. 139
When should qualitative methods be used?p. 140
Collecting data for qualitative analysisp. 144
Types of qualitative datap. 144
Ways of gathering qualitative datap. 145
Transforming and processing data for analysisp. 149
Analysing data qualitativelyp. 150
Examples of types of qualitative data analysisp. 153
Assessing the quality of qualitative methodsp. 158
Conclusionsp. 159
Suggested further readingp. 159
Referencesp. 159
Ethical and practice issues in qualitative researchp. 163
Introductionp. 163
'Sensitive' researchp. 164
Who am I? The role of reflexivityp. 166
Supervision, safety and supportp. 167
Negotiating roles and relationshipsp. 169
Engaging in ethical research practicep. 171
Opting in-ensuring consent is informedp. 172
From the outside looking in, from the inside looking outp. 174
Issues in recording datap. 176
Conclusionp. 177
Referencesp. 177
Evaluating qualitative researchp. 181
Introductionp. 181
What are the different criteria relevant for assessing qualitative research?p. 182
Conclusionp. 188
Referencesp. 188
Mixed methods for evaluation researchp. 191
What is evaluation research and how does it differ from 'traditional' research?p. 191
Approaches to evaluation researchp. 194
Challenges of evaluation researchp. 205
Selecting an approach to evaluationp. 205
Conclusionp. 206
Referencesp. 207
Ethnographyp. 211
Introductionp. 211
What is ethnography?p. 212
A brief methodological history of ethnographyp. 216
Issues of research design and process in ethnographyp. 216
Conclusionp. 225
Referencesp. 225
Documentary analysis and policyp. 229
Introductionp. 229
Policyp. 230
Policy analysisp. 232
Discourse and discourse analysisp. 235
Foucault's understanding of discoursep. 236
Undertaking discourse analysisp. 238
An analysis of palliative care discoursep. 241
Conclusionp. 244
Referencesp. 244
How to...
How to develop a research questionp. 249
Introductionp. 249
The importance of defining a clear research aimp. 249
Generating the research ideap. 251
Prioritizing the research ideasp. 253
Turning the idea into a research questionp. 253
Conclusionp. 256
Referencesp. 256
Writing a research proposalp. 259
Introductionp. 259
How are applications appraised?p. 260
Making the applicationp. 264
Common failingsp. 270
Six top tips for successp. 271
Referencesp. 273
How to gain research ethics approvalp. 275
Introductionp. 275
What steps can researchers take to facilitate ethics approval?p. 276
Conclusionp. 282
Referencesp. 282
How to use a statisticianp. 283
Statistics and statisticiansp. 283
How a statistician can help with your researchp. 284
Designing a quantitative studyp. 284
Estimating the sample sizep. 285
Choosing software for data management and analysisp. 287
Collecting data for the studyp. 288
Analysing data for the studyp. 288
Writing up the studyp. 289
How you can help the statisticianp. 289
Where to find a statisticianp. 290
Conclusionsp. 290
Referencesp. 290
How to write a paperp. 293
How to write the paperp. 293
The submission processp. 297
But I can't writep. 299
Motivations for writingp. 301
Conclusionp. 303
Referencesp. 303
Indexp. 305
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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