Interpretative phenomenological analysis as a useful methodology for research on the lived experience of pain
- PMID: 26516556
- PMCID: PMC4616994
- DOI: 10.1177/2049463714541642
Interpretative phenomenological analysis as a useful methodology for research on the lived experience of pain
Abstract
Interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) is a qualitative approach which aims to provide detailed examinations of personal lived experience. It produces an account of lived experience in its own terms rather than one prescribed by pre-existing theoretical preconceptions and it recognises that this is an interpretative endeavour as humans are sense-making organisms. It is explicitly idiographic in its commitment to examining the detailed experience of each case in turn, prior to the move to more general claims. IPA is a particularly useful methodology for examining topics which are complex, ambiguous and emotionally laden. Pain is a prime exemplar of such a phenomenon: elusive, involving complex psycho-somatic interactions and difficult to articulate. In addition to the 1998 article, published in this Special Issue, two further papers are suggested that the interested reader might wish to look out for.
Keywords: Back pain; chronic pain; intractable; pain; pain clinics; pain perception.
Conflict of interest statement
References
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- Smith JA, Flowers P, Larkin M. Interpretative phenomenological analysis: theory, method and research. London: SAGE, 2009.
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- Smith JA, Osborn M. Pain as an assault on the self: an interpretative phenomenological analysis. Psychol Health 2007; 22: 517–534.
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- Marriott C, Thompson AR. Managing threats to femininity: personal and interpersonal experience of living with vulval pain. Psychol Health 2008; 23: 243–258. - PubMed
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