Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://dora.health.qld.gov.au/qldresearchjspui/handle/1/182
Title: | Methodological considerations related to nurse researchers using their own experience of a phenomenon within phenomenology | Authors: | Johnston, Colleen M Wallis, Marianne Gray, Marion Oprescu, Florin I |
Issue Date: | 2017 | Source: | 73, (3), 2017, p. 574-584 | Pages: | 574-584 | Journal: | Journal of advanced nursing | Abstract: | AIMS: This paper summarizes phenomenology and discusses how nurses can use their own experiences as data and maintain rigour within the method. It explores how data from researchers experiencing the phenomenon of interest could be used to explicate assumptions and pre-understandings and may also be used as data.BACKGROUND: While the ethnographic concept of insider research has gained popularity, the notion of researcher as participant in phenomenology is relatively new. The lived experience of a phenomenon is unique to each person and utilization of the nurse researcher's experiences of the phenomenon should be considered for inclusion as data. | Type: | Article |
Appears in Sites: | Sunshine Coast HHS Publications |
Show full item record
Items in DORA are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.