Innovation in qualitative interviews: “Sharing Circles” in a First Nations community: Table 1

There is growing recognition that different research approaches are necessary to understand the complex interaction between individual and social processes that contribute to risk-taking and injuries. Therefore, qualitative studies have an important role in injury prevention research. This article d...

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Published in:Injury Prevention
Main Authors: Rothe, J P, Ozegovic, D, Carroll, L J
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BMJ 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/ip.2008.021261
https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/ip.2008.021261
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spelling crjcrbmj:10.1136/ip.2008.021261 2024-06-23T07:52:48+00:00 Innovation in qualitative interviews: “Sharing Circles” in a First Nations community: Table 1 Rothe, J P Ozegovic, D Carroll, L J 2009 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/ip.2008.021261 https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/ip.2008.021261 en eng BMJ Injury Prevention volume 15, issue 5, page 334-340 ISSN 1353-8047 1475-5785 journal-article 2009 crjcrbmj https://doi.org/10.1136/ip.2008.021261 2024-06-13T04:14:48Z There is growing recognition that different research approaches are necessary to understand the complex interaction between individual and social processes that contribute to risk-taking and injuries. Therefore, qualitative studies have an important role in injury prevention research. This article describes qualitative research in general and outlines some of the ways qualitative research can add to our understanding of injury. It also describes the role, format and methods of interviews (person-to-person and focus groups) commonly performed in qualitative studies, and proposes a novel approach to interviewing that has special relevance and value in injury research with indigenous populations. This methodology adapts focus group methods to be consistent with the goals and procedures of the traditional First Nations communities’ Sharing Circles. This adaptation provides a culturally appropriate and sensitive method of developing a deep and broad understanding of indigenous participants’ verbal descriptions of their feelings, their experiences and their modes of reasoning. After detailing of this adaptation of the Sharing Circle as a vibrant and vital interview and analysis method, the use of Sharing Circle interview methodology will be illustrated in a study investigating how an Alberta First Nations community experiences and deals with disproportionate levels of injuries arising from impaired driving, outlining important findings uncovered using this novel interviewing method. These findings have been informative to First Nations communities themselves, have informed policy makers provincially and nationally, and have instigated culturally appropriate intervention techniques for Canadian First Nations communities. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations The BMJ Injury Prevention 15 5 334 340
institution Open Polar
collection The BMJ
op_collection_id crjcrbmj
language English
description There is growing recognition that different research approaches are necessary to understand the complex interaction between individual and social processes that contribute to risk-taking and injuries. Therefore, qualitative studies have an important role in injury prevention research. This article describes qualitative research in general and outlines some of the ways qualitative research can add to our understanding of injury. It also describes the role, format and methods of interviews (person-to-person and focus groups) commonly performed in qualitative studies, and proposes a novel approach to interviewing that has special relevance and value in injury research with indigenous populations. This methodology adapts focus group methods to be consistent with the goals and procedures of the traditional First Nations communities’ Sharing Circles. This adaptation provides a culturally appropriate and sensitive method of developing a deep and broad understanding of indigenous participants’ verbal descriptions of their feelings, their experiences and their modes of reasoning. After detailing of this adaptation of the Sharing Circle as a vibrant and vital interview and analysis method, the use of Sharing Circle interview methodology will be illustrated in a study investigating how an Alberta First Nations community experiences and deals with disproportionate levels of injuries arising from impaired driving, outlining important findings uncovered using this novel interviewing method. These findings have been informative to First Nations communities themselves, have informed policy makers provincially and nationally, and have instigated culturally appropriate intervention techniques for Canadian First Nations communities.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Rothe, J P
Ozegovic, D
Carroll, L J
spellingShingle Rothe, J P
Ozegovic, D
Carroll, L J
Innovation in qualitative interviews: “Sharing Circles” in a First Nations community: Table 1
author_facet Rothe, J P
Ozegovic, D
Carroll, L J
author_sort Rothe, J P
title Innovation in qualitative interviews: “Sharing Circles” in a First Nations community: Table 1
title_short Innovation in qualitative interviews: “Sharing Circles” in a First Nations community: Table 1
title_full Innovation in qualitative interviews: “Sharing Circles” in a First Nations community: Table 1
title_fullStr Innovation in qualitative interviews: “Sharing Circles” in a First Nations community: Table 1
title_full_unstemmed Innovation in qualitative interviews: “Sharing Circles” in a First Nations community: Table 1
title_sort innovation in qualitative interviews: “sharing circles” in a first nations community: table 1
publisher BMJ
publishDate 2009
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/ip.2008.021261
https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/ip.2008.021261
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Injury Prevention
volume 15, issue 5, page 334-340
ISSN 1353-8047 1475-5785
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1136/ip.2008.021261
container_title Injury Prevention
container_volume 15
container_issue 5
container_start_page 334
op_container_end_page 340
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