Abstract

In this paper we discuss mixing methods at the level of reviews of research, combining the findings of multiple, already existing, studies that are labelled broadly as using either ‘qualitative’ or ‘quantitative’ methods. We define systematic reviews and outline the ‘mixed methods’ we have developed for combining diverse study types within them. Traditional systematic reviews usually answer a single question, use one type of study and, hence, only require one method of synthesis to combine the findings of studies. Our methods involve conducting three types of synthesis: (1) a statistical meta‐analysis to pool trials of interventions tackling a particular health, social or educational problem; (2) a synthesis of studies examining people’s perspectives or experiences of that problem using qualitative analysis; and (3) a mixed methods synthesis bringing the products of (1) and (2) together. We discuss the strengths of these mixed methods at the review level, reflect on their lessons for the concept of ‘triangulation’ and raise questions about the utility of the terms ‘qualitative’ and ‘quantitative’ and ‘mixed methods’ for classifying different types of research.

Keywords

Systematic reviewManagement scienceQualitative researchMultimethodologyTriangulationPsychological interventionData scienceComputer scienceResearch methodologySociologyPsychologySocial scienceMEDLINEMathematics

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Publication Info

Year
2005
Type
article
Volume
8
Issue
3
Pages
257-271
Citations
364
Access
Closed

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

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364
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26
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243
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Cite This

Angela Harden, James Thomas (2005). Methodological Issues in Combining Diverse Study Types in Systematic Reviews. International Journal of Social Research Methodology , 8 (3) , 257-271. https://doi.org/10.1080/13645570500155078

Identifiers

DOI
10.1080/13645570500155078

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%