Abstract

BackgroundLongitudinal qualitative research is starting to be used in applied health research, having been popular in social research for several decades. There is potential for a large volume of complex data to be captured, over a span of months or years across several different methods. How to analyse this volume of data – with its inherent complexity - represents a problem for health researchers. There is a previous dearth of methodological literature which describes an appropriate analytic process which can be readily employed.MethodsWe document a worked example of the Pen Portrait analytic process, using the qualitative dataset for which the process was originally developed.ResultsPen Portraits are recommended as a way in which longitudinal health research data can be concentrated into a focused account. The four stages of undertaking a pen portrait are: 1) understand and define what to focus on 2) design a basic structure 3) populate the content 4) interpretation. Instructive commentary and guidance is given throughout with consistent reference to the original study for which Pen Portraits were devised. The Pen Portrait analytic process was developed by the authors, borne out of a need to effectively integrate multiple qualitative methods collected over time. Pen Portraits are intended to be adaptable and flexible, in order to meet the differing analytic needs of qualitative longitudinal health studies.ConclusionsThe Pen Portrait analytic process provides a useful framework to enable researchers to conduct a robust analysis of multiple sources of qualitative data collected over time.

Highlights

  • Longitudinal qualitative research is starting to be used in applied health research, having been popular in social research for several decades

  • Longitudinal qualitative research (LQR) is said to be that which focuses on experience over time, with change being the key focus of analysis [1]

  • The aim of this paper is to describe and explicate the process of creating and using pen portraits to conduct an analysis of LQR data

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Summary

Introduction

Longitudinal qualitative research is starting to be used in applied health research, having been popular in social research for several decades. LQR most often takes the form of illuminating illness or recovery trajectories of patients in order to inform future health care priorities [5]. This most often takes the form of ‘serial interviews’ with the same cohort of patients over a given time period, about a specific disease or condition [1,2,3, 5,6,7,8,9]. The emphasis is on repeated contact with the same participants over time Descriptions of this particular method are almost to the exclusion of other ways of collecting LQR data. Little methodological work has been published in relation to how LQR can be undertaken in relation to evaluations, intervention

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