Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Qualitative Digital Diary Methods: Participant-Led Values for Ethical and Insightful Mental Health Research
View through CrossRef
Qualitative digital diary methods are a promising tool for capturing participants’ experiences in their own words and over time. The use of smartphone apps to collect this kind of data provides an accessible and flexible way to participate in research, but to truly benefit from this method, participants needs and preferences must be taken into account. This paper explores participants’ experiences of taking part in qualitative digital diary research, and highlights participants’ values and priorities for qualitative digital diary mental health research. Participants from two qualitative digital diary studies provided feedback on their experiences, in the form of interviews and focus groups, and data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis. The two participant groups, people with lived experience of eating disorders, and young people from diverse backgrounds across London schools, allowed exploration of experiences across different contexts and populations. The six resulting themes each reflect a core value that participants identified as an essential component for them in qualitative digital diary research: Self-expression, flexibility, non-judgement, open communication, helpful reflection, and meaningful impact. Themes each highlight aspects of participants’ experiences that must be taken into account for future research to ensure that participants can take part in this type of research in ways that are meaningful to them, as well as most beneficial to the research. This paper provides an overview of participant experiences of qualitative digital diary research, and provides a framework for centring participant values and preferences in future qualitative diary research.
Title: Qualitative Digital Diary Methods: Participant-Led Values for Ethical and Insightful Mental Health Research
Description:
Qualitative digital diary methods are a promising tool for capturing participants’ experiences in their own words and over time.
The use of smartphone apps to collect this kind of data provides an accessible and flexible way to participate in research, but to truly benefit from this method, participants needs and preferences must be taken into account.
This paper explores participants’ experiences of taking part in qualitative digital diary research, and highlights participants’ values and priorities for qualitative digital diary mental health research.
Participants from two qualitative digital diary studies provided feedback on their experiences, in the form of interviews and focus groups, and data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis.
The two participant groups, people with lived experience of eating disorders, and young people from diverse backgrounds across London schools, allowed exploration of experiences across different contexts and populations.
The six resulting themes each reflect a core value that participants identified as an essential component for them in qualitative digital diary research: Self-expression, flexibility, non-judgement, open communication, helpful reflection, and meaningful impact.
Themes each highlight aspects of participants’ experiences that must be taken into account for future research to ensure that participants can take part in this type of research in ways that are meaningful to them, as well as most beneficial to the research.
This paper provides an overview of participant experiences of qualitative digital diary research, and provides a framework for centring participant values and preferences in future qualitative diary research.
Related Results
Access Denied
Access Denied
Introduction
As social-distancing mandates in response to COVID-19 restricted in-person data collection methods such as participant observation and interviews, researchers turned t...
Is a Fitbit a Diary? Self-Tracking and Autobiography
Is a Fitbit a Diary? Self-Tracking and Autobiography
Data becomes something of a mirror in which people see themselves reflected. (Sorapure 270)In a 2014 essay for The New Yorker, the humourist David Sedaris recounts an obsession spu...
Multimodal Emotion Recognition and Human Computer Interaction for AI-Driven Mental Health Support (Preprint)
Multimodal Emotion Recognition and Human Computer Interaction for AI-Driven Mental Health Support (Preprint)
BACKGROUND
Mental health has become one of the most urgent global health issues of the twenty-first century. The World Health Organization (WHO) reports tha...
Digital Mental Health Landscaping in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
Digital Mental Health Landscaping in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
Introduction
The aim of this project was to map the landscape of who is doing what and where in digital mental health, and to pr...
Preprint - McCombie et al. 2023 - Qualitative diary methods in mental health research - A scoping review and recommendations for research and reporting
Preprint - McCombie et al. 2023 - Qualitative diary methods in mental health research - A scoping review and recommendations for research and reporting
Qualitative diary methods have great potential for mental health research, as they provide rich data about experiences and phenomenon as and when they happen, from the perspectives...
Materialism and Environmental Knowledge as a Mediator for Relationships between Religiosity and Ethical Consumption
Materialism and Environmental Knowledge as a Mediator for Relationships between Religiosity and Ethical Consumption
ABSTRACTOn a global and regional scale, Indonesia has one of the least environmentally sustainable economies in the Asia-Pacific region. Consumption is one of the key factors contr...
McCombie et al. 2023 - PREPRINT - Qualitative digital diary methods- participant-led values for ethical and insightful mental health research
McCombie et al. 2023 - PREPRINT - Qualitative digital diary methods- participant-led values for ethical and insightful mental health research
Qualitative digital diary methods are a promising tool for capturing participants’ experiences in their own words and across time periods. The use of mobile phone apps to collect t...

