Research Output
Improving reporting of meta-ethnography: The eMERGe reporting guidance
  Aims
The aim of this study was to provide guidance to improve the completeness and clarity of meta鈥恊thnography reporting.
Background
Evidence鈥恇ased policy and practice require robust evidence syntheses which can further understanding of people's experiences and associated social processes. Meta鈥恊thnography is a rigorous seven鈥恜hase qualitative evidence synthesis methodology, developed by Noblit and Hare. Meta鈥恊thnography is used widely in health research, but reporting is often poor quality and this discourages trust in and use of its findings. Meta鈥恊thnography reporting guidance is needed to improve reporting quality.
Design
The eMERGe study used a rigorous mixed鈥恗ethods design and evidence鈥恇ased methods to develop the novel reporting guidance and explanatory notes.
Methods
The study, conducted from 2015 to 2017, comprised of: (1) a methodological systematic review of guidance for meta鈥恊thnography conduct and reporting; (2) a review and audit of published meta鈥恊thnographies to identify good practice principles; (3) international, multidisciplinary consensus鈥恇uilding processes to agree guidance content; (4) innovative development of the guidance and explanatory notes.
Findings
Recommendations and good practice for all seven phases of meta鈥恊thnography conduct and reporting were newly identified leading to 19 reporting criteria and accompanying detailed guidance.
Conclusion
The bespoke eMERGe Reporting Guidance, which incorporates new methodological developments and advances the methodology, can help researchers to report the important aspects of meta鈥恊thnography. Use of the guidance should raise reporting quality. Better reporting could make assessments of confidence in the findings more robust and increase use of meta鈥恊thnography outputs to improve practice, policy, and service user outcomes in health and other fields. This is the first tailored reporting guideline for meta鈥恊thnography. This article is being simultaneously published in the following journals: Journal of Advanced Nursing, Psycho鈥恛ncology, Review of Education, and BMC Medical Research Methodology

  • Type:

    Article

  • Date:

    15 January 2019

  • Publication Status:

    Published

  • Publisher

    Wiley

  • DOI:

  • ISSN:

    1057-9249

  • Library of Congress:

    RA Public aspects of medicine

  • Dewey Decimal Classification:

    610.7 Medical education, research & nursing

  • Funders:

    Economic and Social Research Council; Cancer Research UK; Medical Research Council Canada; Wellcome Trust; NIHR Health Service and Delivery Research HS&DR grant; DECIPHer, a UKCRC Public Health Research Centre of Excellence: British Heart Foundation; Welsh Government

Citation

麻豆社区

France, E. F., Cunningham, M., Ring, N., Uny, I., Duncan, E. A., Jepson, R. G., 鈥oyes, J. (2019). Improving reporting of meta-ethnography: The eMERGe reporting guidance. Psycho-Oncology, 28(3), 447-458. https://doi.org/10.1002/pon.4915

Authors

Keywords

Guideline, meta鈥恊thnography, nursing, publication standards, qualitative evidencesynthesis, qualitative research, reporting, research design

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