Background: While Patient and Public Involvement (PPI) is encouraged throughout the research process, engagement is typically limited to intervention design and post-analysis stages. There are few approaches to participatory data analyses within complex health interventions. Methods: Using qualitative data from a feasibility randomised controlled trial (RCT), this proof-of-concept study tests the value of a new approach to participatory data analysis called Participatory Theme Elicitation (PTE). Forty excerpts were given to eight members of a youth advisory PPI panel to sort into piles based on their perception of related thematic content. Using algorithms to detect communities in networks, excerpts were then assigned to a thematic cluster that combined the panel members' perspectives. Network analysis techniques were also used to identify key excerpts in each grouping that were then further explored qualitatively. Results: While PTE analysis was, for the most part, consistent with the researcher-led analysis, young people also identified new emerging thematic content. Conclusions: PTE appears promising for encouraging user led identification of themes arising from qualitative data collected during complex interventions. Further work is required to validate and extend this method. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, ID: NCT02455986. Retrospectively Registered on 21 May 2015.
CITATION STYLE
Best, P., Badham, J., Corepal, R., O’Neill, R. F., Tully, M. A., Kee, F., & Hunter, R. F. (2017). Network methods to support user involvement in qualitative data analyses: An introduction to Participatory Theme Elicitation. Trials, 18(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-017-2289-5
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