Research Methods Lecture 3
Research Methods Lecture 3
– It describes
• How you will conducted your study
• What materials and equipment's you will use
• What methods and procedures you will use
– The corner stone of your research/scientific
method
• ―The worth of all scientific findings depends heavily on the
manner in which the data were collected and analysed‖ 1
Methods and Materials…
Possible sub-sections
• Study design
• Setting/study area
• Study population
• Sample size and sampling methods
• Variables
• Operational definitions
• Data collection
• Data processing/analysis
• Data quality control issues
• Ethical consideration
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Study Setting and area
• It is necessary to check the location where the study
would be conducted (where the data will be collected).
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• Describe the setting, locality of the source
population
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• Describe the source population as related to the
disease of interest
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Choice of Design
Depends on:
– Research Questions
– Research Goals
– Researcher Skills and knowledge
– Nature and availability of information
– Available resources/funds
– Researcher Beliefs and Values
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What happened? Case-control study
Exposed
Cases
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Non-exposed
Exposed
Controls
Non-exposed
Time
Onset of study 7
Direction of enquiry
What is happening? Cross-sectional study
With oucome
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Subjects
Selected for
Study
Without outcome
Time
Onset of study
No direction of enquiry 8
What will happen? Cohort study
With outcome
Exposed
OR
Subjects
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Without outcome
Cohort
Selected
For Study
With outcome
Unexposed
OR
Controls
Without outcome
Direction of enquiry
Study Population: Who are your study subjects?
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Inclusion and exclusion
• Inclusion: Segment of population that will be
included into the study by sampling methods
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Sample size formula for single
population mean
• Where
– α= The level of significance which
can be obtain as 1- confidence
level.
– σ=Standard deviation of the
population
– w= Maximum acceptable
difference
– z α/2 = The value under standard
normal table for the given value of
confidence level 16
Sample size formula of single
population proportion
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COMPARISON OF TWO MEANS
(z1 + z2)2 2 (s2)
(μ2 – μ1)2
• WHERE
• n = Sample size per group
• z1= 1.96 for α error of 5% (95% confidence level)
•z2 = 1.64 for 95% power
• = 1.28 for 90% power
• = 0.84 for 80% power
• s = Standard deviation of the outcome in control
group
•μ2–μ1= Minimum meaningful difference between
means of intervention & control group
COMPARISON OF TWO PROPORTIONS
Where
n = Sample size in each group
Z1 = 1.96 for 95% confidence level
p1 + p2
p = = average of p1 and p2
2
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p2 – p1 = Minimum meaningful difference in proportions
between intervention and control groups
Sampling Techniques/procedures
sample to population)
Variables of the study
• Identify the:
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• That is affected by others.
• Also called outcome variable.
• Usually limited to one or two variables
2. Independent variable (risk factor):
• The program, intervention, or factor that you
believe leads to the outcome.
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• Also called explanatory or exposure variable
Consideration for selecting variables
• Conceptual framework
• Programmatic needs/information for decision
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making
• Resources
• External requirements (government, donor,
headquarters)
• Data availability
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• Standardized indicators
Common mistakes in Selection
• Variables not linked to research objectives
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• Variables that do not currently exist and
cannot realistically be collected
• Eg. Low birth weight: cannot use in rural areas where
few births are in facilities
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• Poor adherence: < 95% of in the month before the study
was conducted.
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• Knowledge on HIV/AIDS and ART:
• Good knowledge= score > 9 out of 12
• Poor knowledge= < 9 out of 12.
• Attitude:
• Favourable = > mean 28
• Unfavourable = < mean
Data collection and Management
Describe your:
– Credibility
– Resources
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Types of interviewing
Mode of interview
– Face to face interview
– Telephone interview
Flexibility
– Structured
– Semi structured
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– Unstructured
Structured Interviews
• A structured interview is a type of interview
in which the interviewer asks a particular set
of predetermined questions.
• Saving of time
• Respondent’s convenience
• Greater anonymity
• Honest response
respondents
Improving Response Rates in SAQ-Mail method
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3. Secondary Data
• Secondary data is the data that have been
already collected by and readily available from
other sources.
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Open-ended
• Open-ended survey questions require respondents
to type their answer into a comment box and don’t
provide specific pre-set answer options.
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Pre-testing
• Refers to the testing of the questionnaire on a small sample
of respondents(5-10%)
• The respondents for the pre-test and for the actual survey
should be drawn from the same population.
• Sorting data
• Data analysis
Data processing and analysis…
A. Sorting Data
• If there are different study populations , number
the questionnaires separately
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using data master sheets (manual compilation of the
questionnaires) or by computer
• Data processing involves:
-Categorizing the data,
-Coding, and
-Summarizing the data 66
Data Quality Control Issues
Describe/provide:
• Operational definitions of crucial concepts
• Selection and training of field workers/research staff
• Pre-test/pilot : Field testing the research methods and tools
• Daily Supervision
• Check for Completeness
– Missing values
– Outliers
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Ethical Considerations
• Professional obligation to safeguard the safety of
study subjects
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• Describe potential ethical concerns and
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mechanisms to minimize harm and maximize
benefits
• Every research undertaking can potentially raise
ethical concerns – always address confidentiality
and privacy!! 68
Ethical consideration
• common ethical principles:
• Respect for person
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• Beneficence
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• justice
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Respect for Persons
1. Respect for autonomy: respect for their
capacity for self-determination
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2. Protection of persons with impaired or
diminished autonomy
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Respect for person…..
oAutonomy:
• Refers to the obligation of the investigator to
respect each participant as a person capable of
making an informed decision regarding
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participation in the study.
• Informed consent:
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• The three basic elements are information,
comprehension and voluntarism
• Confidentiality
• The researcher(s) shall assure that information that
has been obtained in the course of investigation
remains confidential to protect participants from
possible harm at the revelation of such 71
information.
Beneficence:
• Refers to the obligation on the part of the
investigator to attempt to maximize benefits for the
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individual participant and/or community, while
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minimizing risk or harm to the individual.
• Maximize possible benefits and minimize possible
harms
• Do not harm
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Beneficence…
• Maximizing benefits: considerations
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• Communication of study results
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• Provision of health care
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Beneficence….
• Minimizing harm: considerations
• Careful use of local health resources and respect
for local priorities
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• Avoid stigmatization, prejudice, economic loss
• Prepare research staff for special situations
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• Propose measures against eminent risks
observed during the study
• Avoid harmful publicity
• Respect local social and cultural norms
• Confidentiality
• Disclosure of conflict of interest 74
Justice
• This is a question of justice, in the sense of
fairness/ equity in distribution of benefits
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and burdens of research.
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• Another way of conceiving the principle of
justice is that equals must be treated
equally.
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Work plan
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(Gant chart)
• Includes:
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Tasks to be performed
Who will perform the task including number
of staff needed to perform the task
When the task will be performed
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Sample Gant chart
S. ACTIVITY R. Star En TIME FRAME (year)
N BOD t d
sep oct nov dec jan feb mar Apr
O Y date dat
e
1 Topic selection
2 Protocol
3 Get funding
4 Prepare
questionnaire
5 Obtain
ethical
approval
6 Hire staff
7 Train staff
8 Data collection
9 Data validation
10 Data analysis
11 Report writing 77
Budget
How should a budget be prepared?
• It is necessary to use the work plan as a starting
point.
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• Specify, for each activity in the work plan, what
resources are required.
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• Determine for each resource needed the unit cost
and the total cost.
• The budget for the fieldwork component of the work
plan will include funds for personnel, transport and
supplies.
• Include a 5%-10% contingency fund 78
Budget cont…
The Budget Format and Justification
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explanation
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• The type of budget format to be used may vary
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Personnel costs
No Human NO Per No of Total in Remark
power diem/day days Birr
(Birr/day)
1
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3
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4
Total
Cost of supplies
Item Unit Quant Unit Total price
ity price
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Budget summary
S.No Expense type Total
Personnel cost
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Supplies cost
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Publication cost
Gross total
Contingency (10%)
Grand total
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