scholarly journals Multiple case study applied in nursing research: a case report

2018 ◽  
Vol 71 (3) ◽  
pp. 1194-1197
Author(s):  
Lara Adrianne Garcia Paiano da Silva ◽  
Nen Nalú Alves das Mercês

ABSTRACT Objective: To report the experience of using the method of multiple case study. Method: We used the method of multiple case study, conducted with children and adolescents assisted in the pediatric oncology inpatient unit. Results: The steps used for the development of a multiple case study were: Step 1 - Define and design; Step 2 - Prepare, collect and analyze; Step 3 - Analyze and complete. The steps included the development of a research project with the definition of its components, preparation of protocol for the case study, data collection, individual report of cases, data analysis and final report with data cross-referencing. Conclusion: The case study method can be used by nurses and contribute to the advancement in knowledge of nursing as a science and therefore contribute to a full care practice in the context in which the phenomenon happens.

2006 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-90
Author(s):  
Mohammad Efendi

The purpose of this study is to describe smoking behavior of youth. The methods are quatitative, and a multiple case study. Data gathered in the study show that smoking behavior performed by youth has reached a critical level. The Determinant factor influencing their behavior is social environment, such as school, family, and society. Based on findings, it is neglected that education insitution either formal or informal, and youth organizations do serious efforts to minimize smoking behavior. Also, they should run a continous program to promote healthy life among youth.


Author(s):  
Mor Hodaya Or ◽  
Izhak Berkovich

Despite the popularity of distributed leadership theory, the investigation of the micro-political aspects of such models have scarcely been explored, and insights on the cultural variety of distributed practices in schools are limited. The present study aimed to explore what micro-political aspects emerge in participative decision making in collectivist and individualist cultures. To this end, a multiple case study method was adopted, focusing on four Israeli public high schools. Schools were chosen to represent an ‘extreme’ case selection rationale: two non-religious urban schools representing individualist cases, and two communal schools in religious kibbutzim representing communal schools. The analysis shed light on three micro-political points of comparison between the prototypes of participative decision making in collectivist and individualist cultures related to control, actors, and stage crafting. The findings and implications are discussed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 787-794 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan Pullon ◽  
Sonya Morgan ◽  
Lindsay Macdonald ◽  
Eileen McKinlay ◽  
Ben Gray

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 1708
Author(s):  
Marjon C. MALACAPAY ◽  
Reynaldo TABABA

The study of exploring the green technology practices and investments of beach-resorts in Sipalay City, Negros Occidental, Philippines, was realized in support of the worldwide call of promoting responsible and sustainable ecotourism sites. It discloses how these six resorts use green products in their operations, manage their waste, energy, and water resources, uncover practices that need improvement, including its primary causes, and evaluate their green technology investments' progress. This study is qualitative and designed as a multiple case study. Data were collected and validated through methodological triangulation (interview, document analysis, and on-site validation) and analyzed using Qualitative Data Analysis (QDA). Thus, notable findings include the resorts' use of stainless in replacement to plastic straws, glasses instead of disposable cups, and paper instead of Styrofoam boxes. Hence, the absence of compost pitting, the lack of a water control system, and the undersupply of solar panels are a few of the resorts' drawbacks. Therefore, this study discerns that the disproportion between capital and return of investments and the guests' lodging behavior influences the resorts' green technology practices and investments.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matshediso Elizabeth Mohapeloa ◽  
Mmankitseng Lerato Mametsi

Abstract Accelerators help accelerate startups through formal education and mentorship connections during intensive, temporally-compressed programmes for a period of three -six months.This paper investigate how Resource Based Theory (RBT) posits accelerators for sustained competitive advantage of startups. Our research question was to determine the value (in terms of resources offered) that accelerators bring to benefit startups that have been through the acceleration programmes. Our focus was to uncover what value gets created by accelerator programme and how. Through this qualitative study we selected a multiple case study method of 5 accelerator programmes in South Africa. For analysis we linked the RBT (tangible and intangible resources) for each accelerator’s entrepreneurial ecosystem, to determine if the phenomenon of the burgeoning accelerator industry can be better understood. Document reviews were explored to determine intended impact that sustain success for startup (technology) companies. Findings revealed that accelerators ensure that fewer startups fail and more SME’s become sustainable into the future. Secondly accelerators help startup companies define and build their initial products. Thirdly upscale is achieved through, identification of promising customer segments. Finally mentorship and accelerator process enhanced and securing resources is strengthening necessary resources available to startups.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Evgeniya Lupova

This research develops insight into the functioning of self-aware and organised clusters seeing these as ‘context-embedded meta-organisations’. Specifically, it builds a theoretical framework for strategy-making in organised clusters, elaborates on their ‘agentic’ nature and ability to shape their environments. Contrary to a more ‘traditional’, determinist, approach in cluster studies, viewing clusters solely as ‘geographic concentrations’ of organisations, the perspective adopted in this research conceptualises clusters as ‘organisations of organisations’. This suggests a more voluntarist stance where self-aware and organised clusters are perceived as intentional actors within their environments implementing deliberate strategies and pursuing system-level goals. This perspective is rather novel in cluster studies and opens up interesting research directions. This thesis explores two major implications of the ‘meta-organisational’ view of clusters: (1) the deliberate nature of collective strategy-making in these and (2) clusters’ ‘actorhood’ and their interactions with their contexts. First, seeing clusters as ‘organisations of organisations’, suggests that these can be deliberately managed and calls for the application of management studies to the cluster context. However, to date, most strategy tools and frameworks have been developed with an individual firm in mind. As a consequence, these cannot reflect the complexity of the ‘meta-organisational’ setting where a number of interests are at play, and strategy-making is a collective exercise. Thus, the ‘meta-organisational’ perspective on clusters calls for the adaptation of the extant strategy frameworks to account for the specifics of the setting. To answer the need for strategy tools and approaches adapted to the context of clusters seen as meta-organisations, this thesis proposes a novel framework of the ‘cluster business model’. This topic is addressed in Article 1 adopting a design science approach to develop a practical tool for strategy- and decision-making in clusters. The article proposes a model describing value creation in the cluster context, develops a method for its application in practice as well as a visual representation of both. Moreover, as clusters are increasingly seen as drivers of innovations and mechanisms for a transition towards the knowledge economy, this thesis develops a set of interventions for cluster business model design fostering the innovativeness of its members. Article 2 addresses this topic and applies a mixed methodology combining a systematic literature review with a design-oriented synthesis. This allows to uncover the generative mechanisms of cluster innovativeness and formulate a set of interventions aimed at shaping cluster business model elements with a view to fostering its innovativeness. Second, the meta-organisational perspective on clusters raises important questions about their intentionality and ‘actorhood’. Indeed, seeing clusters as ‘organisations of organisations’ implies that these can deliberately act, just as individual organisations. This view, again, has not yet been explored in the cluster studies, still dominated by the ‘traditional’, determinist, approach. Recent research in the field of organisation studies suggests that organisations may display different levels of ‘organisationality’ depending on the extent to which the attributes of formal organisations are present. Applying this knowledge to clusters allows uncovering the yet unexplored mechanisms of cluster ‘actorhood’ and its limitations. Article 3 explores this topic and applies a theory-elaborating multiple case study method to gather insight into the clusters’ ability to shape their environments mediated by their level of ‘organisationality’. The article develops a set of theoretical propositions based on the case studies of two clusters in Australia. It suggests that clusters can deliberately ‘construct’ themselves both as organisations and social actors. However, their ‘organisationality’ design choices influence the locus of their actorhood resulting in more or less collaborative approaches to social action. Finally, and related to the previous point, viewing clusters as intentional actors capable of interaction with their environments, suggests that these can adopt deliberate strategies in response to external pressures. Going further, clusters can be seen as change agents or institutional entrepreneurs in unsupportive institutional settings. Article 4 explores this topic and adopts a theory-elaborating embedded multiple case study method. It studies two clusters in the context of a transition economy (Russia) presenting a range of institutional barriers to innovation. The article uncovers the dual role of clusters as institutional entrepreneurs. It suggests that clusters may both act collectively due to their powerful position grouping a number of players, and, at the same time, these can contribute to creating enabling conditions for the individual acts of institutional entrepreneurship. While this thesis offers a range of implications for research and practice in the cluster field, its most broad and significant contribution lies in the further development of the novel ‘meta-organisational’ perspective on self-aware and organised clusters. This research thus contributes to the consolidation of the ‘meta-organisational’ perspective and coins new language for addressing the topic of ‘managed’ or ‘organised’ clusters. This perspective has not yet drawn wide attention in cluster research and practice but can be valuable for empowering clusters and giving them practical tools to exercise their collective power and shape their environments. In a way, this ‘meta-organisational’ view of clusters might become ‘self-fulfilling’ by contributing to shaping the perception of clusters as deliberate and organised actors, triggering a reflection of cluster practitioners and providing them with adapted conceptual frameworks and practical tools


2009 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 149-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Schönerklee ◽  
M. Peev ◽  
H. De Wever ◽  
T. Reemtsma ◽  
S. Weiss

The paper summarises the definition of an extended biokinetic model dedicated to micropollutant degradation in wastewater treatment and the parameter estimation methodology for this model. Additionally it describes results on experimental parameter estimation for two target micropollutants, naphthalene disulfonate (2,6-NDSA) and benzothiazole sulfonic acid (BTSA). Subsequently the parameterised model is applied to real operational data from two laboratory-scale (MBR) installations. The work presents the full chain of theoretical model development, model analysis and practical application to case study data for micropollutants.


2022 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sabira Taher ◽  
Naoko Muramatsu ◽  
Angela Odoms-Young ◽  
Nadine Peacock ◽  
C. Fagen Michael ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Food insecurity (FI), the limited access to healthy food to live an active and healthy life, is a social determinant of health linked to poor dietary health and difficulty with disease management in the United States (U.S.). Healthcare experts support the adoption of validated screening tools within primary care practice to identify and connect FI patients to healthy and affordable food resources. Yet, a lack of standard practices limits uptake. The purpose of this study was to understand program processes and outcomes of primary care focused FI screening initiatives that may guide wide-scale program implementation. Methods This was an embedded multiple case study of two primary care-focused initiatives implemented in two diverse health systems in Chicago and Suburban Cook County that routinely screened patients for FI and referred them to onsite food assistance programs. The Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research and an iterative process were used to collect/analyze qualitative data through semi-structured interviews with N = 19 healthcare staff. Intended program activities, outcomes, actors, implementation barriers/facilitators and overarching implementation themes were identified as a part of a cross-case analysis. Results Programs outcomes included: the number of patients screened, identified as FI and that participated in the onsite food assistance program. Study participants reported limited internal resources as implementation barriers for program activities. The implementation climate that leveraged the strength of community collaborations and aligned internal, implementation climate were critical facilitators that contributed to the flexibility of program activities that were tailored to fill gaps in resources and meet patient and clinician needs. Conclusion Highly adaptable programs and the healthcare context enhanced implementation feasibility across settings. These characteristics can support program uptake in other settings, but should be used with caution to preserve program fidelity. A foundational model for the development and testing of standard clinical practice was the product of this study.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document