4.2 Review

Advancing qualitative health research approaches in applied nutrition research

Journal

JOURNAL OF HUMAN NUTRITION AND DIETETICS
Volume 35, Issue 2, Pages 376-387

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jhn.12989

Keywords

applied health research; focused ethnography; interpretive description; case study; qualitative description; research methods

Funding

  1. Ontario Women's Health Scholar postdoctoral award
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  3. Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship

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This article discusses the challenges of applying qualitative health research methods in nutrition and dietetics research and provides guidance and methods, such as the EPPiC framework and four qualitative health research designs. This research can help nutrition scientists in conducting applied qualitative health research.
Applied health research methods are evolving to meet the demands of increasingly complex health research needs. Qualitative health research, focused on individual perspectives of health, wellness, illness and recovery, has emerged as a unique discipline of this field. With distinct foci, methods and rules, qualitative health research has the potential to answer applied health research questions to inform practice, education and policy. Despite this potential, there are challenges to the application of qualitative health research methods in nutrition and dietetics research. These include limited training and mentorship availability for the rigorous application of these methods, as well as misaligned goals between the traditional social science-based qualitative approaches and emerging applied nutrition science needs. Recognising these limitations, this review aims to provide guidance to the nutrition scientist conducting applied qualitative health research. Using nutrition and dietetic examples from the literature, this review defines qualitative health research and advances the Emphasis-Purposeful sample-Phenomenon of interest-Context (EPPiC) framework as a tool for constructing structured overarching research questions and introduces four qualitative health research designs (qualitative description, interpretive description, case study and focused ethnography) relevant to applied nutrition science. This includes guidance on defining the sample, identifying strategies for data collection, analytic techniques and data reporting.

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