Qualitative Reporting Standards
Cross-source consensus on Qualitative Reporting Standards from 1 sources and 7 claims.
1 sources · 7 claims
How it works
Comparisons
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- The majority of sampled studies in both neurology and nephrology did not explicitly state their philosophical perspective, with 78% and 71% omitting it respectively. — Which medical subspecialties use qualitative research? A bibliometric analysis
- Researcher positionality was reported in only 21% of neurology studies and 19% of nephrology studies. — Which medical subspecialties use qualitative research? A bibliometric analysis
- Reflexivity was the most poorly reported criterion, present in only 18% of neurology and 9% of nephrology studies. — Which medical subspecialties use qualitative research? A bibliometric analysis
- Strong methodological coherence — alignment between stated methodology, research aims, data collection, and analytic strategy — was the clearest positive finding. — Which medical subspecialties use qualitative research? A bibliometric analysis
- Reporting deficiencies did not differ substantially between high-volume and low-volume subspecialties, indicating these omissions reflect field-wide practice norms rather than subspecialty-specific inexperience. — Which medical subspecialties use qualitative research? A bibliometric analysis
- Positionality and reflexivity reporting rates in medical subspecialties mirror those found in nursing journals, where positionality reached 33.4% and reflexivity 19.1%. — Which medical subspecialties use qualitative research? A bibliometric analysis
- Contributing factors to under-reporting may include publishing word limits as well as shortcomings in research practice itself. — Which medical subspecialties use qualitative research? A bibliometric analysis