Volume 38, Issue 6 pp. 574-583

Storytelling and the interpretation of meaning in qualitative research

Patricia Hill Bailey MHSC PhD RN BN

Patricia Hill Bailey MHSC PhD RN BN

Professor, School of Nursing, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

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Stephen Tilley BA PhD RMN

Stephen Tilley BA PhD RMN

Senior Lecturer, Department of Nursing Studies, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK

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First published: 24 September 2008
Citations: 100
Patricia Hill Bailey, School of Nursing, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada P3E 2C6. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Aim. This paper reviews literature on narrative analysis and illustrates the meaning-making function of stories of chronic illness through analysis and discussion of two case studies from a study of acute episodes of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

Background. Individuals living with COPD experience acute exacerbations characterized by extreme dyspnea, but there has been little research to provide understanding of these events from the perspectives of individuals with COPD, family caregivers, and nurses. Narrative analysis – considered in the context of the aims of qualitative research – illuminates how these people make sense of acute exacerbation events by telling stories.

Design and methods. In an ethnographic study, 10 patient–family nurse units in two Canadian general hospitals participated in interviews concerning acute episodes of COPD. Narrative analysis enabled identification of several story forms and their functions.

Results. Examples were found of a story told twice with different meanings, and of a patient's ‘death story’ used to communicate distrust of the nurse's ability to recognize the seriousness of distress and implications for its potential course. These examples are presented, and interpreted with respect to issues of meaning.

Conclusions. The analysis indicates that stories told by patients in the context of nurse–client interactions inform understanding of the individual's acute exacerbation events beyond the biophysical.

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