'Is that what I said?'Interview transcript approval by participants: an aspect of ethics in qualitative research

I Mero-Jaffe - International journal of qualitative methods, 2011 - journals.sagepub.com
I Mero-Jaffe
International journal of qualitative methods, 2011journals.sagepub.com
This article deals with insights gained from data analysis of feedback comments on
transcripts sent to interviewees. It contributes to understanding of research studies that
include transcripts, specifically on the contribution of participants' review of transcripts on the
quality of those transcripts, and thus on the quality of research. The transfer of the transcripts
to the interviewees was intended to validate the transcripts, to preserve research ethics, and
to empower the interviewees by allowing them control of what was written. Interviewee …
This article deals with insights gained from data analysis of feedback comments on transcripts sent to interviewees. It contributes to understanding of research studies that include transcripts, specifically on the contribution of participants' review of transcripts on the quality of those transcripts, and thus on the quality of research. The transfer of the transcripts to the interviewees was intended to validate the transcripts, to preserve research ethics, and to empower the interviewees by allowing them control of what was written. Interviewee responses related to the ratification of content, the authenticity of that which was said during the interview, corrections of language, additional clarifications, power interactions and changes in the balance of power between the interviewer and interviewees, feelings of embarrassment and threat, research ethics, and reflective responses. The experience of sending the transcripts to the interviewees raised research and ethical issues that require added caution and consideration when sending transcripts to interviewees.
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