Q Methodology in the COVID-19 Era
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Overview of Q Methodology
1.2. Process of Conducting a Q Methodology Study (Q Study)
1.3. Moving to Online Q Methodology
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Aims
2.2. Case Study: Developing the Online Q Study
2.3. Pilot Evaluation of the Online Q Methodology
3. Results
3.1. Convenience
“The online experiment is more convenient, more handy, I can do it through my phone at my workplace or at my home at any time. So it will give me the opportunity to do it in my best time and my convenient place in any part of the day.”
“The setting was very relaxed. I took my cup of tea, and I answered all the questions without any interference from any other circumstances.”
“In face to face, once they finish doing the sorting, you might want to copy it into a shorter template, maybe an A4 to document what they have done. So that you will transfer that into the system when you want to do analysis. But with online Q methodology, as soon as they do, it is already there.”
“It will be easier and convenient for them to do your study. And also, for the researcher to do it online, it’s much easier and much organized and much more easy to pull the data.”
3.2. Recruitment
“The most important point for me, it’s the opportunity for me to be a part of this experiment because if it was face to face, I didn’t think so I will be able to be a part of it because it’s difficult for me to commute and meet you face to face.”
“If you asked me to participate face to face during the beginning of COVID-19, I will say I’m sorry, I can’t, because I was very conservative about the whole thing about COVID-19.”
“You can involve as many people as you can from different countries, you are not restricted by the place.”
“I think online Q is seamless because in just one night, it can be sent across the world to get data and you can get the responses back within the shortest possible time.”
“I think it is the only way and better way to do during these days due to the social distancing and all these measures to prevent COVID from spreading out.”
3.3. Cost
“It is going to reduce a lot of time waste and a lot of money waste.”
“It is just that you have not used money for logistics in terms of transportation but that has now been pushed to the participant who is not going to use their own data. It depends on where you are going to do the study. But I think in developed settings, like where I did my study and where I am right now, you will still use that particular money.”
3.4. Challenges
“I think online questions should be done more carefully. It has to be clear for everyone. All participants have to understand it. Many people, I think are afraid to join the online version studies because they think it’s difficult or complicated or they cannot ask a person. But what I experienced with your experiment was the process was easy and clear.”
“If the internet connection is bad, it will affect the participants.”
“Nothing that happened to me, but I would consider if the internet connection was not very good. Maybe that would make me uncomfortable. But it’s something to consider. It is so worrisome to think about it.”
“I think, the difficult part is building the platform from the scratch, once you pass it, I think everything is easier because it is your work.”
“It might be privacy issues especially with online studies, especially for us sensitive topics. The participant might seem not happy to discuss it online.”
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Participant 1 (P1) Participant 2 (P2) Participant 3 (P3) | Physiotherapists who participated in the telemedicine case study |
Participant 4 (P4) Participant 5 (P5) | Q methodology researchers |
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Alanazi, A.S.; Wharrad, H.; Moffatt, F.; Taylor, M.; Ladan, M. Q Methodology in the COVID-19 Era. Healthcare 2021, 9, 1491. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9111491
Alanazi AS, Wharrad H, Moffatt F, Taylor M, Ladan M. Q Methodology in the COVID-19 Era. Healthcare. 2021; 9(11):1491. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9111491
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlanazi, Ahmed S., Heather Wharrad, Fiona Moffatt, Michael Taylor, and Muhammad Ladan. 2021. "Q Methodology in the COVID-19 Era" Healthcare 9, no. 11: 1491. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9111491
APA StyleAlanazi, A. S., Wharrad, H., Moffatt, F., Taylor, M., & Ladan, M. (2021). Q Methodology in the COVID-19 Era. Healthcare, 9(11), 1491. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9111491