Dear all:
There are many ways of collecting evidence and I completely agree that anecdotal evidence
collected from clinical experience should GROUND the basis of everything we do. I know
the ins and outs of epidemiology, but it is useless if the questions asked are not GROUNDED
in plausible connections based on observations. Naturalistic inquiry which but one of many
qualitative research techniques is based on a different epistemological basis than
epidemiology is every bit as useful for gathering evidence and in some cases even more
useful. This is the reason why I NEVER EVER read the abstracts until I've read the methods
section of a quantitative study. Very often the more important information is not in the
numbers but in how the study was done. Ditto for qualitative studies --- you can do really
lousy focus groups that are meaningless --- or very important in depth analyses that reveal
fantastic new insights depending on how well you conduct the study.
Best, Susan Burger
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