articleField MethodsApr 28, 2016Closed access

How Many Focus Groups Are Enough? Building an Evidence Base for Nonprobability Sample Sizes

Family Health International 360 · Clinical Research Institute

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Few empirical studies exist to guide researchers in determining the number of focus groups necessary for a research study. The analyses described here provide foundational evidence to help researchers in this regard. We conducted a thematic analysis of 40 focus groups on health-seeking behaviors of African American men in Durham, North Carolina. Our analyses revealed that more than 80% of all themes were discoverable within two to three focus groups, and 90% were discoverable within three to six focus groups. Three focus groups were also enough to identify all of the most prevalent themes within the data set. These empirically based findings suggest focus group sample sizes that differ from many of the “rule…

Citation impact

1,693
total citations
FWCI
178.77
Percentile
100%
References
41
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Focus group
  • Generalizability theory
  • Sample (material)
  • Focus (optics)
  • Psychology
  • Set (abstract data type)
  • Thematic analysis
  • Qualitative research
No related works found for this paper.