Abstract
This article outlines the contribution that ethnography could make to process evaluations for trials of complex health-behaviour interventions. Process evaluations are increasingly used to examine how health-behaviour interventions operate to produce outcomes and often employ qualitative methods to do this. Ethnography shares commonalities with the qualitative methods currently used in health-behaviour evaluations but has a distinctive approach over and above these methods. It is an overlooked methodology in trials of complex health-behaviour interventions that has much to contribute to the understanding of how interventions work. These benefits are discussed here with respect to three strengths of ethnographic methodology: (1) producing valid data, (2) understanding data within social contexts, and (3) building theory productively. The limitations of ethnography within the context of process evaluations are also discussed.
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Details
1 University of Exeter Medical School, Psychology Applied to Health Group, Exeter, UK (GRID:grid.8391.3) (ISNI:0000000419368024)
2 Cardiff University School of Medicine, Neuadd Meirionnydd, Division of Population Medicine, Cardiff, UK (GRID:grid.5600.3) (ISNI:0000000108075670)




