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Quality and Safety in Health Care 2003;12:326-327; doi:10.1136/qhc.12.5.326
Copyright © 2003 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
Qual Saf Health Care 2003;12:326-327
© 2003 BMJ Publishing Group & Institute for Healthcare Improvement

COMMENTARY

Ethnography in health care

What can ethnography do for quality and safety in health care?

M Dixon-Woods

Senior Lecturer in Social Science and Health, Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 6TP, UK; md11@leicester.ac.uk


Used carefully, ethnography can identify errors in health care and provide explanations for their occurrence.

Keywords: ethnography

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Originally developed within anthropology, ethnography is one of the most longstanding social science research approaches. Its emphasis is on the description and analysis of "the everyday"—routine behaviours in their natural settings. Many would characterise ethnography as the process of querying understandings and practices that are taken for granted: it renders the everyday world problematic by making the "ordinary" into the "extraordinary". It is best understood as a holistic approach that does not rely on any single method of data collection. Observation, which may be unstructured "hanging out" or more structured and purposeful scrutiny of situations to look for particular things, is perhaps the defining feature of ethnography. These observations are often supplemented by interviews (sometimes very informal and part of the "hanging out" process) or documentary materials collected from the setting (e.g. posters, internal memos, reports of meetings), photographs, artefacts, and so on.

The interpretation of . . . [Full text of this article]


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  • Armitage, G., Holder, A., Hodgson, I. (2004). Using ethnography (or qualitative methods) to investigate drug errors: A critique of a published study. Journal of Research in Nursing 9: 379-387 [Abstract]  

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