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The aim of IPA is to uncover what a lived experience means to the individual through a process of in depth reflective inquiry.3 IPA draws on phenomenological thinking, with the purpose to return ‘to the things them-selves’ (p 168).4 However, IPA also acknowledges that we are each influenced by the worlds in which we live
24 Φεβ 2020 · The study applied an interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) approach to qualitative research, to describe how the participants made sense of their experiences of providing care to ...
In this book, we introduce you to IPA, explore its origins, and provide practical guidance on how to use it, assuming you have limited or no experience with qualitative methods. To make the topic more approachable, we provide examples using data from our published and unpublished studies. While IPA originated in psychology, it is now used
20 Σεπ 2008 · This article examines the approach of interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) and adds to discussions regarding the contribution that the approach can make to healthcare research and compares and contrasts IPA with other phenomenological approaches.
Interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) was orig-inally developed in 1995 by Johnathan Smith as a method to undertake experiential research in psychology and has gained prominence across health and social sciences as a way to understand and interpret topics that are complex and emotionally laden, such as chronic illness experi-
IPA is an integrative hermeneutic phenomenology [2] first proposed by Jonathan Smith [3] in a paper that argued for an experiential approach in psychology that could equally dialogue with mainstream psychology.
20 Σεπ 2008 · In doing this, the paper demonstrates the essential simplicity, paradoxical complexity, and methodological rigour that IPA can offer as a research tool in understanding healthcare and illness from the patient or service user perspective.