Abstract

The use of qualitative research in empirical bioethics is becoming increasingly popular, but its implementation comes with several challenges, such as difficulties in aligning moral epistemology and methods. In this paper, we describe some problems that empirical bioethics researchers may face; these problems are related to a tension between the different poles on the spectrum of scientific paradigms, namely a positivist and interpretive stance. We explore the ideas of narrative construction, ‘genres’ in medicine and dominant discourses in relation to empirical research. We also reflect on the loss of depth and context that may occur with thematic or content analyses of interviews, and discuss the need for transparency about methodologies in empirical bioethics. Drawing on insights from narrative approaches in the social sciences and the clinical-educational discipline of Narrative Medicine, we further clarify these problems and suggest a narrative approach to qualitative interviewing in empirical bioethics that enables researchers to ‘listen (and read) in new ways’. We then show how this approach was applied in the first author’s research project about euthanasia decision-making. In addition, we stress the important ethical task of scrutinizing methodologies and meta-ethical standpoints, as they inevitably impact empirical outcomes and corresponding ethical judgments. Finally, we raise the question whether a ‘diagnostic’, rather than a ‘problem-solving’, mindset could and should be foregrounded in empirical ethics, albeit without losing a commitment to ethics’ normative task, and suggest further avenues for theorizing about listening and epistemic (in)justice in relation to empirical (bio)ethics.

Highlights

  • How are qualitative interviews typically conducted in bioethics research? And how might narrative approaches1 in the social sciences, humanities and clinical education enrich this research practice? These questions constitute the foundation and impetus of this article

  • While courses on social science methodology can help those without a social science background get acquainted with the application of methods in qualitative research, we discovered that training in Narrative Medicine (NM) teaches qualitative researchers skills and attitudes that are better aligned with an interpretive stance

  • We have shown how insights from narrative research and Narrative Medicine could enrich qualitative interviewing in medicine and bioethics by deepening our understanding of the coconstruction and situatedness of stories and the importance ofsubjectivity and positionality

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Summary

Introduction

How are qualitative interviews typically conducted in bioethics research? And how might narrative approaches1 in the social sciences, humanities and clinical education enrich this research practice? These questions constitute the foundation and impetus of this article. We describe a narrative approach to qualitative interviewing with illustrative examples from the first author’s research project on euthanasia decision-making in Dutch general practice.

Results
Conclusion

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