Evidence-based research : dilemmas and debates in health care

Author(s)
Bibliographic Information

Evidence-based research : dilemmas and debates in health care

Brian Brown, Paul Crawford and Carolyn Hicks

Open University Press, 2003

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780335211647

Description

"A most valuable resource setting health care research into a contemporary philosophical setting" Dr Colin Thunhurst, Course Director, University College Cork* Why is the philosophy of science important for health care research? * What impact do world-views and paradigms have on the research process and the knowledge it generates? * Why do some kinds of concepts get replaced by others? This book covers the major perspectives in the philosophy of science and critically discusses their relevance to health care research, using examples of paradigms, concepts, theories and research findings in the health sciences. It makes sense of the bewildering variety of assumptions, world-views and epistemiological implications of the different research methods. It enables the reader to become an informed consumer of scholarship on health care issues. The authors describe how health care research has been influenced by positivistic and interpretative approaches, and how it has recently been challenged by postmodernist philosophies. All of these approaches have research methods aligned with them which have taken their place in the panoply of tools at the disposal of the health scientist. Written in a clear and accessible style, Evidence-Based Research demonstrates how the different philosophical bases to research impact in real-life health care work and research. It is key reading for the growing number of people involved in health care research in universities and health settings, and is particularly suitable for advanced undergraduate and masters students researching in the health care sciences.

Table of Contents

Introduction: theories of science and theories of society Epistemology I: positivism - 'they don't build epistemologies like that any more' Concepts and theories I: what is a concept in the health sciences? Concepts and theories II: operationalism and its legacy The philosophy of experimentation Experiments in medicine and the health sciences Epistemology II: interpretationand hermeneutics Philosophies of description The post-modernist challenge Philosophy and research design in practice References Index.
Volume

ISBN 9780335211654

Description

* Why is the philosophy of science important for health care research? * What impact do world-views and paradigms have on the research process and the knowledge it generates? * Why do some kinds of concepts get replaced by others? This book covers the major perspectives in the philosophy of science and critically discusses their relevance to health care research, using examples of paradigms, concepts, theories and research findings in the health sciences. It makes sense of the bewildering variety of assumptions, world-views and epistemiological implications of the different research methods. It enables the reader to become an informed consumer of scholarship on health care issues. The authors describe how health care research has been influenced by positivistic and interpretative approaches, and how it has recently been challenged by postmodernist philosophies. All of these approaches have research methods aligned with them which have taken their place in the panoply of tools at the disposal of the health scientist. Written in a clear and accessible style, Evidence-Based Research demonstrates how the different philosophical bases to research impact in real-life health care work and research. It is key reading for the growing number of people involved in health care research in universities and health settings, and is particularly suitable for advanced undergraduate and masters students researching in the health care sciences.

Table of Contents

Introduction: theories of science and theories of society Epistemology I: positivism - 'they don't build epistemologies like that any more' Concepts and theories I: what is a concept in the health sciences? Concepts and theories II: operationalism and its legacy The philosophy of experimentation Experiments in medicine and the health sciences Epistemology II: interpretationand hermeneutics Philosophies of description The post-modernist challenge Philosophy and research design in practice References Index.

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Details
  • NCID
    BA68643593
  • ISBN
    • 0335211658
    • 033521164X
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Maidenhead, Berkshire
  • Pages/Volumes
    297 p.
  • Size
    25 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
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