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You are here: Home / Uncategorized / Considerations for Conducting Qualitative Health Research During COVID-19 at the University of Toronto

Considerations for Conducting Qualitative Health Research During COVID-19 at the University of Toronto

August 10, 2020 by ccqhrAdmin

We have all been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. We are experiencing these impacts in personal, social, and professional capacities. We are being asked to engage in the practice of physical-distancing, thus limiting our in-person contact not only with our community of researchers, but also with our broader communities, research partners, and study participants. Physical distancing presents challenges for researchers and graduate students doing qualitative health research.

CQ’s two main goals are to build capacity through teaching, continuing education, and our community of practice, and to produce new and innovative methodological knowledge. This includes the development, adaptation, and evaluation of our critical qualitative methodologies and research practices.

Currently, we are bringing together a set of resources for engaging in qualitative methods during a time where face-to-face interaction is not possible. We intend to update these resources regularly and we encourage the qualitative community to share links with us that we can all use. We aim to create a compendium that may provide inspiration or guidance to researchers working at all levels; from our graduate students to seasoned qualitative health researchers. Graduate students considerations must align with the School of Graduate Studies COVID-19 decisions and those of their PhD program director.

We also recommend that all qualitative health researchers regularly read the Health Sciences REB updates. Students are encouraged to contact the Research Ethics Office (ethics.review@utoronto.ca) for questions, or Daniel Gyewu, REB Manager, Health Sciences (d.gyewu@utoronto.ca) for a consultation.

Research and Innovation COVID-19 Information
UofT COVID-19 Information

Compendium of resources available to date: 

  • Doing Fieldwork in a Pandemic: Crowdsourced document initiated by Deborah Lupton
  • Virtual Not Viral- No Panic in the #PHDPANDEMIC: Curated Links to Helpful Resources and Strategies
  • NVivo Free Webinar: COVID-19 and Doing Virtual Fieldwork
  • Society for Qualitative Inquiry in Psychology: Distinguished Researcher Interview Series
  • LSE: Digital Ethnography Collected Reading List
  • McGill Qualitative Health Research Group: Resources for Doing Qualitative Research During a Pandemic
  • Methods in the time of COVID-19: The Vital Role of Qualitative Inquiries, International Journal of Qualitative Methods
  • Social Science Space: The Best Laid Plans…Qualitative Research Design During COVID-19
  • U of T Guidance for the Recovery of Human Research During the COVID-19 Pandemic
  • Topical Mapping of Academic Publications on Social Aspects of COVID-19, Deborah Lupton
  • Doing Arts Research in a Pandemic: A crowd-sourced document responding to the challenges arising from COVID-19, The Culture Capital Exchange
  • Changing Research Practice: Undertaking social science research in the context of Covid-19

Cite this page as: CQ. (2021, April 14). Considerations for Conducting Qualitative Health Research During COVID-19 at the University of Toronto. Retrieved from: https://ccqhr.utoronto.ca/2020/08/10/considerations-for-conducting-qualitative-health-research-during-covid-19-at-the-university-of-toronto/.

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