Methods for the thematic synthesis of qualitative research in systematic reviews
Thomas University · University College London · +1 more institution
Abstract
There is a growing recognition of the value of synthesising qualitative research in the evidence base in order to facilitate effective and appropriate health care. In response to this, methods for undertaking these syntheses are currently being developed. Thematic analysis is a method that is often used to analyse data in primary qualitative research. This paper reports on the use of this type of analysis in systematic reviews to bring together and integrate the findings of multiple qualitative studies.
We describe thematic synthesis, outline several steps for its conduct and illustrate the process and outcome of this approach using a completed review of health promotion research. Thematic synthesis has three stages: the coding of text 'line-by-line'; the development of 'descriptive themes'; and the generation of 'analytical themes'. While the development of descriptive themes remains 'close' to the primary studies, the analytical themes represent a stage of interpretation whereby the reviewers 'go beyond' the primary studies and generate new interpretive constructs, explanations or hypotheses. The use of computer software can facilitate this method of synthesis; detailed guidance is given on how this can be achieved.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 70.73
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 64
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Thematic analysis
- Qualitative research
- Psychological intervention
- Coding (social sciences)
- Psychology
- Content analysis
- Computer science
- Medical education