Qualitative research -- concerned with how people
interpret their experience and how they use those interpretations to
guide the way they live -- can help enrich facts and figures produced by
quantitative research. This introductory piece briefly describes
qualitative research methodology, design, and sampling strategies, and
emphasizes the collaborative and participatory characteristics of this
approach.
Greater attention to reproductive health
resulting from the 1994 International Conference on Population and
Development, and questions about sexual behavior raised by the global
HIV/AIDS epidemic, have heightened interest in the use of qualitative
research. As such research expands into new areas, its many findings are
being used to guide research and program design. For example,
qualitative methods are particularly useful in helping researchers
understand survey populations, as described in Strengthening
Behavioral Surveys. Such research also complements findings from
quantitative studies, and explores issues that are hidden or have
received little study. Changing
Attitudes Present Opportunities explains, for example, how
qualitative methods have illuminated changing attitudes in Nepal toward
love, marriage, and childbearing. Clear, systematic guidelines for the
planning and conduct of qualitative research in sexual and reproductive
health have been lacking, but FHI has recently published a field guide
of practical strategies and methods for using qualitative research. The
basic logic and rationale for qualitative research decisions are also
presented in the guide, which is described in Clear
Guidelines for Qualitative Research.
As qualitative research explores an increasing
number of reproductive health topics, it is generating ideas about ways
to improve services. In the following articles, readers will find
summaries of selected qualitative research initiatives that address
diverse reproductive health issues:
How
Women Interpret Gynecological Symptoms
Qualitative research conducted in northeast
Thailand indicated that gynecological symptoms are common and of
substantial concern to women, greatly affecting their health-seeking
behavior, use of medication, sexual relations, and peace of mind.
Complex
Factors Hinder Condom Promotion
In recent research using both quantitative and
qualitative methods, FHI investigators sought to identify and explain
factors interfering with condom promotion at two locations in western
Kenya. The goal: to help the Kenyan Ministry of Health lower the
prevalence of STIs/HIV in the region by developing ways to improve
condom counseling and distribution.
When
Women Hide Contraceptive Use
In two studies — one in urban Mali and
another in urban Zambia — use of qualitative research methods
revealed why a small subset of contraceptive users chose to keep their
method use secret from their partners.
Communication
Style Can Affect Method Continuation
In a study using a qualitative design and a
quantitative analysis, investigators found that client-centered
interactions in family planning clinics in Egypt were associated with
greater client satisfaction and, notably, greater contraceptive method
continuation.
Integrating
STI Services Proves Problematic
Qualitative research in four African countries
showed that attempts to integrate the management of sexually
transmitted infections into existing maternal and child health-family
planning services were difficult.
Domestic
Violence Examined
In Goa, India, qualitative research designed to
help develop sustainable interventions to assist victims of domestic
violence has contributed to the creation of a fully staffed network of
domestic violence counselors and legal experts.
Beneficial
Policies Need To Be Implemented
Marked gaps between policy and practice
regarding domestic violence and family planning services were brought
to light by qualitative research in Orellana, Ecuador.
Keys
to Reducing Maternal Mortality
Recommendations of ways to reduce maternal
deaths arise from qualitative research into the circumstances of 63
obstetric emergencies in West Java, Indonesia.
Will
Vaginal Microbicides Be Acceptable?
Investigators are using qualitative research
methods to determine whether women and men are likely to accept a
vaginal microbicide as protection against sexually transmitted
infections, including HIV.
The impact of involving youth in reproductive
health programs is still unknown. But combining youths’ energy and
daring with adults’ experience, funding, and credibility elevated
youth concerns about HIV/AIDS as a priority for international leaders at
the XIV International AIDS Conference in Barcelona, Spain.