Aschbrenner Kelly A, Kruse Gina, Gallo Joseph J, Plano Clark Vicki L
Psychiatry, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College, Hanover, USA.
Division of General Internal Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, USA.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2022 Sep 26;8(1):217. doi: 10.1186/s40814-022-01178-x.
Pilot feasibility studies serve a uniquely important role in preparing for larger scale intervention trials by examining the feasibility and acceptability of interventions and the methods used to test them. Mixed methods (collecting, analyzing, and integrating quantitative and qualitative data and results) can optimize what can be learned from pilot feasibility studies to prepare rigorous intervention trials. Despite increasing use of mixed method designs in intervention trials, there is limited guidance on how to apply these approaches to address pilot feasibility study goals. The purpose of this article is to offer methodological guidance for how investigators can plan to integrate quantitative and qualitative methods within pilot feasibility studies to comprehensively address key research questions.
We used an informal consensus-based process informed by key methodological resources and our team's complementary expertise as intervention researchers and mixed methodologists to develop guidance for applying mixed methods to optimize what can be learned from pilot feasibility studies. We developed this methodological guidance as faculty in the Mixed Methods Research Training Program (MMRTP) for the Health Sciences (R25MH104660) funded by the National Institutes of Health through the Office of Behavioral and Social Science Research.
We provide the following guidance for applying mixed methods to optimize pilot feasibility studies: (1) identify feasibility domain(s) that will be examined using mixed methods, (2) align quantitative and qualitative data sources for the domain(s) selected for mixing methods, (3) determine the timing of the quantitative and qualitative data collection within the flow of the pilot study, (4) plan integrative analyses using joint displays to understand feasibility, and (5) prepare to draw meta-inferences about feasibility and implications for the future trial from the integrated data.
By effectively integrating quantitative and qualitative data within pilot feasibility studies, investigators can harness the potential of mixed methods for developing comprehensive and nuanced understandings about feasibility. Our guidance can help researchers to consider the range of key decisions needed during intervention pilot feasibility testing to achieve a rigorous mixed methods approach generating enhanced insights to inform future intervention trials.
试点可行性研究在为大规模干预试验做准备方面发挥着独特的重要作用,通过检验干预措施及其测试方法的可行性和可接受性来实现。混合方法(收集、分析和整合定量与定性数据及结果)能够优化从试点可行性研究中所学到的内容,从而为开展严格的干预试验做好准备。尽管混合方法设计在干预试验中的应用日益广泛,但关于如何运用这些方法来实现试点可行性研究目标的指导却很有限。本文旨在为研究人员如何在试点可行性研究中计划整合定量和定性方法以全面解决关键研究问题提供方法学指导。
我们采用了基于非正式共识的流程,参考了关键的方法学资源以及我们团队作为干预研究人员和混合方法专家的互补专业知识,来制定关于应用混合方法以优化从试点可行性研究中所获知识的指导意见。我们作为国立卫生研究院通过行为和社会科学研究办公室资助的健康科学混合方法研究培训项目(MMRTP,R25MH104660)的教员,制定了此方法学指导意见。
我们为应用混合方法以优化试点可行性研究提供以下指导:(1)确定将使用混合方法进行检验的可行性领域;(2)为选定进行混合方法研究的领域匹配定量和定性数据源;(3)确定在试点研究流程中定量和定性数据收集的时间安排;(4)计划使用联合展示进行整合分析以了解可行性;(5)准备从整合数据中得出关于可行性以及对未来试验影响的元推断。
通过在试点可行性研究中有效整合定量和定性数据,研究人员能够利用混合方法的潜力,对可行性形成全面而细致入微的理解。我们的指导意见可帮助研究人员在干预试点可行性测试过程中考虑一系列关键决策,以实现严谨的混合方法路径,从而产生更深入的见解,为未来的干预试验提供参考。