Chang Jamie Suki
1 University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
Qual Health Res. 2017 Mar;27(4):609-619. doi: 10.1177/1049732316667055. Epub 2016 Sep 24.
To understand health, research needs to move outside of controlled research settings into the environments where health activities occur-homes, streets, and neighborhoods. I offer the docent method as a qualitative place-based approach for exploring health in a participant-driven, structured, and flexible way. The docent method is a participant-led, audiotaped, and photographed walking interview through broad "sites of interest" (SOIs). It is rooted in grounded theory and influenced by community-based participatory research and walking interviews. The three stages of the docent method involve: (a) a warm-up interview focusing on positionality, participant background, and mapping/planning SOIs; (b) a participant-led, photographed walking interview to and around the SOI; and (c) a wind-down interview in the community. I describe the methodological influences, development, and procedures of the docent method drawing from my own experiences conducting it with formerly homeless women living in permenant supportive housing in the Tenderloin neighborhood of San Francisco.
为了理解健康,研究需要从受控的研究环境扩展到健康活动发生的场所——家庭、街道和社区。我提出讲解员方法,这是一种基于场所的定性方法,用于以参与者驱动、结构化且灵活的方式探索健康。讲解员方法是由参与者主导、进行录音和拍照的步行访谈,访谈对象是广泛的“感兴趣的场所”(SOI)。它扎根于扎根理论,并受到社区参与式研究和步行访谈的影响。讲解员方法的三个阶段包括:(a)热身访谈,重点关注立场、参与者背景以及绘制/规划感兴趣的场所;(b)由参与者主导、在感兴趣的场所及其周边进行拍照的步行访谈;(c)在社区进行的收尾访谈。我将根据自己在旧金山田德隆区为居住在永久性支持性住房中的前无家可归女性实施讲解员方法的经验,描述该方法的方法论影响、发展过程和步骤。