Hermeneutic observational studies: describing a method.

There is a need to develop and use research observations in the clinical field, primarily to gain insight into and assess evidence of what comprises caring in a real-life situation and confirm what is actually taking place. In addition, assessments lead to a new and different understanding of what caring constitutes, thereby enabling the identification of what kind of care is being provided and is required. Such observations also enable the observer to perceive and verbalise caring. There are ongoing discussions, specifically in Nordic countries, on how to use caring science-based observations as a means of collecting and interpreting qualitative data through the application of a hermeneutic approach, which constitutes describing what has been seen and reporting on it by way of ethical obligation. This article contributes to the debate through the provision of additional content and by reflecting on the development and usability of hermeneutical research observations from a method and methodological perspective, thereby refining previous ideas and extending previous assumptions. The primary study objective was to report on the experience of utilising observations as a single data collection method for hermeneutic research with the aim of evaluating the interplay between intensive care unit (ICU) patients and their next of kin. A secondary objective was to highlight the impact of preknowledge and preunderstanding on the interpretation process. An intensive care context was assessed as the most appropriate, as the majority of patients are unable to engage in verbal narratives during ongoing treatment and care. The benefits of employing hermeneutic observation as well as interpretation and preunderstanding from a caring science perspective are considered.

[1]  I. Fridh,et al.  The Patient’s Situation During Interhospital Intensive Care Unit-to-Unit Transfers: A Hermeneutical Observational Study , 2019, Qualitative health research.

[2]  Julia C Phillippi,et al.  A Guide to Field Notes for Qualitative Research: Context and Conversation , 2018, Qualitative health research.

[3]  A. Onwuegbuzie,et al.  Observations in Qualitative Inquiry: When What You See Is Not What You See , 2018, International Journal of Qualitative Methods.

[4]  F. Sundberg,et al.  Nursing staff's experiences of working in an evidence-based designed ICU patient room-An interview study. , 2017, Intensive & critical care nursing.

[5]  M. Arman,et al.  Clinical caring science as a scientific discipline. , 2017, Scandinavian journal of caring sciences.

[6]  V. Chiang,et al.  Hermeneutic phenomenological analysis: the ‘possibility’ beyond ‘actuality’ in thematic analysis , 2017, Journal of advanced nursing.

[7]  Linda Nyholm,et al.  Understanding and safeguarding patient dignity in intensive care , 2017, Nursing ethics.

[8]  I. Fridh,et al.  Lighting, sleep and circadian rhythm: An intervention study in the intensive care unit. , 2015, Intensive & critical care nursing.

[9]  Berit Lindahl,et al.  Bringing research into a closed and protected place – the development and implementation of a complex clinical intervention project in an ICU , 2019 .

[10]  M. Arman,et al.  The Nordic Tradition of Caring Science , 2015, Nursing science quarterly.

[11]  G. Rolfe Foundations for a human science of nursing: Gadamer, Laing, and the hermeneutics of caring. , 2015, Nursing philosophy : an international journal for healthcare professionals.

[12]  U. Lindström,et al.  Hermeneutic reading of classic texts. , 2013, Scandinavian journal of caring sciences.

[13]  B. Lindahl,et al.  A phenomenological study of experiences of being cared for in a critical care setting: the meanings of the patient room as a place of care. , 2013, Intensive & critical care nursing.

[14]  M. Schuster Hermeneutics as Embodied Existence , 2013 .

[15]  Kitt Austgard Doing it the Gadamerian way--using philosophical hermeneutics as a methodological approach in nursing science. , 2012, Scandinavian journal of caring sciences.

[16]  B. Lindahl,et al.  Patients' statements and experiences concerning receiving mechanical ventilation: a prospective video-recorded study. , 2012, Nursing inquiry.

[17]  Ruth Endacott,et al.  Qualitative observation in a clinical setting: challenges at end of life. , 2012, Nursing & health sciences.

[18]  Berit Lindahl,et al.  The experiences of patients and their families of visiting whilst in an intensive care unit--a hermeneutic interview study. , 2011, Intensive & critical care nursing.

[19]  K. Eriksson, Evidence: To see or not to see. , 2010, Nursing science quarterly.

[20]  D. Nåden Hermeneutics and observation--a discussion. , 2010, Nursing inquiry.

[21]  K. Eriksson,,et al.  Caritas--caring as an ethical conduct. , 2008, Scandinavian journal of caring sciences.

[22]  I. Bergbom,et al.  Visits to intensive care unit patients--frequency, duration and impact on outcome. , 2007, Nursing in critical care.

[23]  B. Rasmussen,et al.  On Being Dependent on Home Mechanical Ventilation: Depictions of Patients' Experiences Over Time , 2006, Qualitative health research.

[24]  Anita Atwal,et al.  Non-participant observation: using video tapes to collect data in nursing research. , 2005, Nurse researcher.

[25]  A. Mulhall In the field: notes on observation in qualitative research. , 2003, Journal of advanced nursing.

[26]  Janice M. Morse,et al.  Analysis of Videotaped Data: Methodological Considerations , 2002 .

[27]  Olli Lagerspetz,et al.  The Ethical Demand , 1998 .

[28]  Arthur W. Frank,et al.  The Wounded Storyteller: Body, Illness, and Ethics , 1995 .