Clinical

Research philosophy and Socrates: rediscovering the birth of phenomenology

<p>The number of phenomenological studies published in nursing journals is rising, perhaps because phenomenology provides answers to or insights into important questions or issues in health research. According to McKibbon and Gadd (2004), out of 355 published qualitative studies (60,330 articles in healthcare journals were reviewed), approximately 37 per cent were claimed to be phenomenological ones, followed by grounded theory (35 per cent) and ethnography (18 per cent). Therefore, the literature underlines the need for more ‘effective’ phenomenological methods that will benefit from interleaving or integration with the underpinning philosophy of phenomenology.</p>

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