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Health SA Gesondheid (Online)

On-line version ISSN 2071-9736
Print version ISSN 1025-9848

Health SA Gesondheid (Online) vol.25  Cape Town  2020

http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/hsag.v25i0.1163 

ORIGINAL RESEARCH

 

Consciring subjects: Q methodology described

 

 

Ntsandeni MoseyaI; Solomon MashegoaneI; Saraswathie GovenderI; Malose MakhubelaII

IDepartment of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities, University of Limpopo, Polokwane, South Africa
IIDepartment of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities, University of Johannesburg, Johannesburg, South Africa

Correspondence

 

 


ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Despite the availability of Q methodology as a qualitative research alternative that seemingly circumvents the limits of standard qualitative methods across various fields, a recent review of qualitative research literature in leading health-related South African journals indicated that Q methodology is hardly a method of choice in South Africa.
AIM: This article demonstrates the application of Q methodology, a qualitative research option, in psychological research. The methodology is suitably designed to investigate and clarify diverse subjective experiences, attitudes, opinions and/or beliefs held by a group of people on a given topic.
METHODOLOGY: A study on the subjective understandings and perceptions of epilepsy is used to illustrate how Q methodology works. In this particular study, a diverse group of participants, comprising students, traditional healers, doctors, nurses, pastors, high school teachers, laypeople domiciled in rural and urban areas, and speakers of two of the dominant African dialects in the area, was used.
RESULTS: Analysis produced three distinctive factors that are appositely named the scientific, the moderated traditionalist and the community-oriented stances. Each factor, constituted on the basis of close resemblance and statistical association between the rank orderings, represents an identifiable understanding of epilepsy by an exclusive grouping of participants.
CONCLUSION: Concluding remarks about Q methodology are provided.

Keywords: concourse; epilepsy; factor array; P-set; Q-sample; Q-sorting.


 

 

Introduction

A 10-year (2007-2017) period inspection of entries in leading health-related South African journals, namely, Curationis, Health SA Gesondheid, South African Journal of Psychology and the South African Medical Journal, did not find a single study using Q methodology as a method of choice. Health SA Gesondheid published 313 articles in the said period, of which 43% were qualitative. Yet, none of the latter featured Q methodology. A study by Oberholzer et al. (2011:4) used a modified form of Q sorting. However, it was not considered an exemplary Q methodology study as it did not incorporate all the elements of Q methodology (see Stainton Rogers 1995:185-186). Our contribution hopes to develop interest in Q methodology by illustrating its use, in the process describing its mechanics of subjectivity.

Q methodology is a subjective procedure used to explore existing perspectives on a topic that can potentially elicit a range of distinct points of view. Unlike other standard qualitative procedures, it blends qualitative and quantitative techniques to portray operant subjectivity (Brown 1980, 1993; McKeown & Thomas 2013; Watts & Stenner 2012). The procedure was introduced by Stephenson in the 1930s as an organised context for individuals to provide their own perspectives on a given topic, allowing the points of view to be objectively analysed and compared once they are provided (Brown 1980:8-9; Stephenson 1953:4). Indeed, Q methodology takes advantage of man's propensity to reorder and configure according to one's perception what initially seems to be unordered, discrete stimuli (also see Watts & Stenner 2005:76).

The product of reordering stimuli is, according to Brown (1980:18), operant because it exists naturally and takes its meaning from the specific context where it was composed. In the case of Q methodology, it will be shown later that a Q sort is operant in the sense that the individual constructing it is directed by a set of statements available for sorting; one statement is preferred over another, and there is no right or wrong sorting as the individual sorts according to their point of view (Brown 1980:6). Subsequent to sorting, Q methodology goes on to exploit the communicability of the inherent subjectivity. A respondent sorts statements according to some 'condition of instruction', what Coogan and Herrington (2011:25) called the sorting 'terms of reference'. Once the sorting is completed, the Q sort constitutes a characteristic configuration amenable to statistical analysis, making the individual sorter a variable rather than the Q sort itself. Q methodology then has the capacity to hold 'constant for inspection and comparison' (Coogan & Herrington 2011:24) the individual's representation of their viewpoint on an issue.

There are essentially two aspects to Q methodology: the qualitative element is in plain view as the individual configures and forms a standpoint, and the quantitative element is in the background, out of sight, yet offering substantive support to the qualitative element. The entire process takes place in a series of logical steps. In this contribution, the steps followed in conducting a Q methodology study will be described. A study of different viewpoints, attitudes and beliefs about epilepsy will be used as an example.

 

Epilepsy as a candidate for study through Q methodology

Epilepsy is a common syndrome of different cerebral disorders of the central nervous system. It is characterised by chronic recurrent but unpredictable seizures arising from an underlying brain abnormality, in particular spurts of electrical discharge in either specific or general areas of the brain. It affects approximately 69 million people worldwide, 10-15 million of whom are from Africa (cf. Jäger et al. 2005:603; Ngugi et al. 2010; Paul et al. 2012).

Although modern scientific knowledge is advanced and cheap effective medical interventions are available (Elger & Schmidt 2008:523; Heaney & Sander 2007:465), many individuals with epilepsy and their next of kin in Africa are less inclined to consult professionals and specialists. Aside from using established traditional remedies such as sehlare sa seebana (see Jäger et al. 2005), they seek alternative cures and interventions, and in extreme cases patients isolate themselves or are segregated and abandoned by family and community members (Doganavsargil et al. 2017; Jilek-Aall et al. 1997; Keikelame et al. 2017:3-5; Zoli et al. 2003:40).

At the core of the reaction to epilepsy are contrasting beliefs about causation, disease course and treatment. Probable causes and risk factors for epilepsy are diverse, including malnutrition (Crepin et al. 2007:1932; Gomes, Oliveira & Castro 2011:27-28), malaria (Carter et al. 2004:980) and vascular diseases (Diop et al. 2003:151). Many cases in sub-Saharan Africa and other underdeveloped regions are attributable to cysticercosis (Millogo, Njamnshi & Kabwa-PierreLuabeya 2019:32; Zoli et al. 2003:36-37), a situation which is reversed in the event that safe pig husbandry is practised (Nkouawa et al. 2015:118). Nevertheless, there are many instances where the cause of the disease cannot be identified (Gripper & Welburn 2017:220). Studies in Africa have not been able to identify the cause in more than 50% of the cases (Preux & Druet-Cabanac 2005:25). When the causes are so diverse and causal uncertainty predominates in equally more cases, then there is room for speculation in people's minds.

Apart from individuals who have never heard of the disease, there are those who believe that epilepsy has supernatural causes and is rightly controlled and remedied through traditional indigenous or religious methods (Devinsky 2003:76-77; Mbewe et al. 2007:456; Millogo et al. 2004:252). They stand in contrast to those who hold scientific beliefs about the causes and treatments of the illness. Knowledge, beliefs, attitudes and behaviour vary in society, with demographic variables such as age, education and domicile responsible for the variance (Bigelowa et al. 2015:30; Ibinga et al. 2015:141; Pupillo et al. 2014:43). Because of the contrasts in understanding and the divergent perceptions, epilepsy is a good candidate for Q methodology study and is an appropriate concept to illustrate the workings of the approach.

 

Description of Q methodology

Background of the study

An exploration of the perspectives on epilepsy was conducted in the Polokwane (Limpopo) area among African individuals from different walks of life. Before proceeding with the study, it was approved by the University of Limpopo's Faculty of Humanities research and ethics committee (details can be found in Moseya 2009). Participation was restricted to black Africans so as to, at the least, control for culture. Selected participants were presumed to potentially hold different views about epilepsy in general. This is informed by the epilepsy literature that suggests that people from different backgrounds (domicile, class, education and so on) hold different attitudes and perceptions towards the illness (Ekeh & Ekrikpo 2015). The first step in designing the study was to conceive of the nature of the problem to be investigated. Unlike in typical hypothetico-deductive studies common in quantitative research, a Q methodology study formulates a research question. The research question, a straightforward, single-proposition statement, was used to guide the formulation and structuring of the Q set, and eventually formed the basis for the 'condition of instruction'. The study simply explored the question of existing opinions on epilepsy. As the intention was to uncover the existing opinions about the condition, the study ensured that participants were diverse, as will be explained immediately hereafter.

P-set

Participants who are carefully selected for their theoretical relevance to the problem under consideration are referred to as a P-set. In quantitative designs sample size can be prescribed for one reason or another, while it is not the case in Q methodology. A P-set of 40-60 is found adequate for all purposes (Brown 1980:260, 1993:104; Watts & Stenner 2012:70-73). However, the determining factor regarding the size of the P-set is whether all existing viewpoints have been adequately covered. Thus, fewer or more people can be used, and single case studies are possible (Brown 1980:58, 1993:94). A formal sampling term closer to the activity of selecting participants for a Q methodological study is 'maximum variation sampling' - a purposive sampling method used to capture a wide range of perspectives relating to a subject matter, and to purposefully ensure diversity or heterogeneity in the sample or cases. In this study, 33 participants were identified for inclusion in the P-set. Groups of three participants represented categories of people who in our view may have had some dealings with an epileptic case or hold an opinion about the disease. There were 11 categories, for a total of 33 participants. The categories included profession (teacher, health sciences student, non-health sciences student, doctor, nurse, traditional healer and pastor), domicile, (non-professional urban dweller and non-professional rural dweller) and ethnic group (a traditional Tshivenda speaker and a traditional Sepedi speaker).

Devising the concourse or Q-population, and the Q-set

A population in a Q methodology study is not a group of respondents as is the case in other traditional methods of research. It is a universe of items (statements, single words, objects, images and so on) relating to the topic of interest, and the sum total is called a concourse or Q-population. It is from the concourse that the final, representative set of items, the Q-set/Q-sample, will be drawn. In the epilepsy study, initial interviews were conducted with diverse individuals to gather statements pertaining to the concept of epilepsy. Of course, a concourse can never be complete. The aim in putting it together is to ensure that at least the most common and diversely representative ideas are covered. The transcribed interviews were carefully scanned to locate any expression of opinion, attitudes and beliefs about epilepsy. The epilepsy literature was also consulted to add any pertinent perspectives that may not have arisen from the interviews. In this way, 137 statements were developed. The statements were hybrids because they were constructed from more than one source, including naturalistic and non-human sources (McKeown & Thomas 2013:21). They were spread across three broad themes, namely, scientific, supernatural (non-religious and religious) and social. Three of the authors finalised and approved 36 statements to form the Q-set. This was performed by analysing and refining the content of the statements to ensure concourse representativeness, clarity and appropriateness to context.

Q-sorting

Participants were presented with a Q-pack containing the main materials of the study: randomly numbered cards with individually printed statements (Q-set); a quasi-normal distribution grid (i.e. a grid typically used to rank-order statements along a continuum ranging between two extremes; see Figure 1 for a post-sorting example), to record agreement or disagreement with the statements on a nine-point ranking distribution, a demographic information section and a section where participants could write comments (Q-grid); an instruction sheet explaining the sorting process; and a consent form that also included participant rights as research subjects as well as a brief explanation of the nature and aim of the study.

The cards were presented face up, showing the statements to be sorted. The card number was thus hidden from view. Instructions directed participants to carefully compare, sort and then rank-order all 36 statements according to how they agreed or disagreed with them. To be exact, each participant was directed to sort the statements into three piles of 'agree', 'disagree' and 'neutral'. Thereafter, they sorted by ranking and ordering the piles into a quasi-normal distribution. After sorting the statements, participants were directed to then record their Q sort using the numbers at the back of the cards. A sorting grid populated with a Q sort array of factor one would look like Figure 1. Post-sorting interviews were conducted to clarify the statement rankings, for instance, why statements were ranked very low or very high, and to allow participants to express any additional view they considered important for the study. In the case of the study used here, no substantive post-interview information emerged.

Q methodological analysis

The quantitative analysis component in this study involved the use of correlation and factor analysis to group individual participants who express a common view by sorting the statements into nearly the same configuration. Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) was used for the purpose. Analysis was carried out for persons rather than by variables (i.e. data were extracted with by-person factor analysis), which means that it was persons' viewpoints that were correlated rather than the conventional Pearson R standard of correlating tests. Thus, factor analysis in Q methodological analysis goes beyond the mere analysis of a transposed correlation matrix (Brown 1980:19). It is in fact an analysis of a matrix that is centred on the viewpoints of persons in relation to how they rank-order statements or objects.

Q-methodological analysis can be performed on dedicated software. PQMethod 2.35 (Schmolck 2002) is a free program (supplied with a manual) that can be used to conduct all required Q methodology analyses. PCQ (Stricklin & Almeida 2004) is a commercially available Q methodology software. General software such as SPSS can also be used. In the epilepsy study, the statistics and scores that were derived as requirements for Q methodology analysis were the following:

  • A correlation analysis was carried out to produce a by-person matrix, consisting of all paired correlations of the 33 Q sorts.

  • The correlation matrix was subjected to factor analysis, which in turn produced rotated factor loadings. If correlations show resemblance between two Q sorts, factor loadings are larger, family resemblances of Q sorts. Factor loadings are types of groupings to which people have grouped themselves by virtue of their Q sorts. In our study of the different viewpoints on epilepsy, we introduced the currently en vogue and presumably more precise minimum average partial (MAP) test (Velicer 1976) and parallel analysis (PA; Horn 1965) to determine the number of factors and therefore find a statistically precise factor solution. The MAP test and PA both suggested three factors. For instance, a minimum average squared correlation of r2 = 0.034 was achieved for the three-component solution with Velicer's MAP (1976) test. Principal components analysis with Varimax rotation was then conducted, and factor extraction was limited to three factors.

  • Factor weighting was conducted to reflect the actual contribution of a Q sort to the factor it loads on. Alternatively, a factor loading is an approximation of how much a Q sort resembles the factor it loads to (Brown 1980). Given that there is variance in how close Q sorts resemble their respective factors, weighting was a necessary step in the study of viewpoints on epilepsy before the merging of related Q sorts was executed. Weighting was achieved using Spearman's (1927, cf. Brown 1980:241-242; McKeown & Thomas 2013:132) formula:

where w is the weight and f is the factor loading.

  • Q sorts that loaded on the same factor were merged into a composite factor array. Because more than one factor was extracted, the process applied to each of the factors. The factor arrays were z-transformed to make comparability possible.

  • The final step in the analysis was to transform the scores of each of the factor arrays back to the original values of the quasi-normal distribution. The result was factor arrays that resembled Q sorts. Each factor array is constituted by Q sorts that are highly associated with each other and are largely distinct to the Q sorts that belong to other factor arrays. Watts and Stenner (2005:82) call them 'best estimate' Q sorts. The sum of factor arrays is in fact a record of the respondents' interpretive configuration of the Q sample.

 

Factor interpretation

Interpretation was conducted to highlight and explain the viewpoint shared by respondents whose Q sorts are correlated and load on the same factor. That shared perspective is embodied in each of the three composite Q sorts or arrays configured in this study (Table 1). The approach was to identify characterising statements of the factors. These are statements that have been ranked high on either end of the distribution grid, that is, +4 and 4, followed by +3 and 3. The first factor was formed of individuals whose viewpoints about epilepsy consisted of conventional, medically informed opinions. Thus, it was named the 'scientific viewpoint'. It does not come as a surprise that nearly all the Q sorts completed by health professionals loaded on this factor. Participants in the 'scientific viewpoint' considered it important that people with epilepsy must take their medication and felt that they should be discouraged from using alcoholic beverages (#4, +4; #9, +4). Thus, they endorsed the view that it was important for people with epilepsy to take care of themselves (#13, +3). They rejected the supernatural causal frame (#27, 4; #28, 4), together with any explanation or viewpoint associated with it (#31, 3; #32, 3).

The second factor was named a 'moderated traditionalist viewpoint' because the participants endorsed traditional healing (#26, +4; #29, +3) and the indirect involvement of supernatural forces in the cure of epilepsy (#31, +4), and appeared to reject genetic factors in the disease (#1, 1). Yet, they are open to education about epilepsy (#22, +3) and are negative about any type of supernatural causal explanations (#27, 3; #34, 3). Their position has to do with the cures rather than the causes of the disease. Regardless of their traditionalist viewpoint, they would discourage alcohol intake among people with epilepsy (#9, +3). Although the taking of medication was not a distinguishing characteristic in this factor, it nevertheless was endorsed (#4, +2). Participants in the 'moderated traditionalist viewpoint' do not seem to react with typical bigotry such as being shocked and overreacting to witnessing an epileptic attack (#15, 4; #23, 4). Interestingly, traditional healers belong to this factor.

The third and final factor is called the 'community-oriented viewpoint' because its focus is on the socio-cultural aspects of epilepsy. Participants in this factor are of the view that epilepsy is traumatic to patients and their caregivers (#19, +4) and they are concerned that people with epilepsy are not well understood by community members (#20, +4). They strongly disagree with the ideas that epilepsy is a contagious mental disturbance (#10, 3; #11, 4), that those afflicted can seek attention by faking seizure attacks (#23, 3) and that its cure is linked to supernatural events. All the Q sorts completed by pastors (all of whom were affiliated to charismatic churches) belong to this array. However, the array also had a nurse, a health sciences student and a teacher.

There were only two clear consensus statements in this study. Participants in all factors agreed with the statement pertaining to the institution of programmes to educate the community about epilepsy (#22, +3) and disagreed with the description that people with epilepsy are mad (#10, 3). Nonetheless, a distinguishing feature about the group of participants who took part in this study is that they tended to share a number of characteristics. For instance, factors 2 and 3 participants agreed with the explanation that epilepsy can be caused by head trauma, a distinguishing feature of factor 1. It is clear from the results of the present study that the context in which this study was conducted is one where the modern, scientific view of epilepsy is making inroads. It is likely that awareness programmes and other forms of intervention have eroded the traditionalist view of epilepsy, where the causes and interventions of the disease are linked exclusively to supernatural causes.

Another interesting observation about this study is the workings of the respondents' operant subjectivity. Doubt about the participants' freedom to impose their understanding is dispelled, and the disappearance of the researcher's intended meaning or understanding of the statements is evident. A statement (Item 32: 'I believe that epileptics have worms in their heads'.), which was formed on the basis of the role of neurocysticercosis and other parasitic infections of the brain in epilepsy (Reddy & Volkmer II 2017:177), has been rated negatively by all respondents including those with a scientific orientation to epilepsy. We suspect that they assumed a literal, lay interpretation of the scientific notion conveyed. They appeared oblivious to the fact that neurocysticercosis, an infectious cause of epilepsy, is actually itself caused by brain cysts from the Taenia solium tapeworms (Millogo et al. 2019:32; Reddy & Volkmer II 2017:177; Zoli et al. 2003:37).

 

Evaluation of Q methodology

There are weaknesses related to Q methodology. McKeown (1990:3) did observe that studies of subjectivity have to contend with the play of two subjectivities, that of the observer and the observed. Q methodology attempts to tame the subjectivity of the observer and prioritise that of the observed. Nonetheless, there is always the danger of the observer's subjectivity creeping into the process. The latitude given to the researcher to decide on the final concourse allows for purposeful structuring. However, it can allow the researcher's subjectivity and bias to creep in. The same problem is possible during analysis and interpretation. In spite of Q methodologists following rules of analysis and introducing standards of interpretation, the exercises remain an art. They permit the researcher to make a judgement about the type of factor analysis to use, and depending on the analytic procedure, the number of factors to extract. Researchers can even decide on additional items to interpret over and above the factor characterising items. Awareness of the possible role of the researcher's subjectivity will, as is the case in all research paradigms, go a long way in minimising its intrusion at any stage of the research process.

Another limitation has to do with how far the results can be generalised beyond the context in which they were made. Q methodology findings have the same generalisability limitations as conventional qualitative research methods. Research data produced from Q methodology are limited because of its somewhat exploratory nature and its data not being based on random samples. Nevertheless, the latter is not a goal of the method (Brown 1980:192). It only illuminates the viewpoints that are there in a given context and time without establishing the actual proportion of people holding them.

On the positive side, Q methodology is unique in that it is able to characterise the gestalt of each individual participant's response, and then integrate it into a configuration common to other respondents sharing the viewpoint. Thus, it is a suitable and powerful methodology for exploring and explaining patterns in subjectivities, generating new ideas and hypotheses, and identifying contrasts in views, opinions and preferences. Q methodology offers an innovative approach to qualitative analysis through the 'quantification of patterned subjectivities' (Shemmings 2006:147). Other qualitative methods can only group participants into themes, but they do not offer the sophisticated configuration that Q methodology allows. Related to this is the meaning that participants attach to the statements, apart from the meanings generated during the stage of constructing the Q sample. Q methodology incorporates the participant's meaning-making and accepts it as a spontaneous but legitimate act in the research process. No wonder many participants enjoy the sorting process and, when completed, express satisfaction with it.

 

Conclusion

Q methodology is available as an approach that seemingly circumvents the limits of standard qualitative methods. In particular, the important element of the subjectivity of the researcher is present. Yet, unlike in other methods, Q methodology acknowledges its presence, and the techniques of the methodology are comparatively less amenable to it. The strength of the method lies in its combination of both qualitative and quantitative techniques to harness subjectivity.

 

Acknowledgements

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no financial or personal relationships that may have inappropriately influenced them in writing this article.

Author's contributions

The data were originally collected by N.M., and all the authors participated equally in the authorship of the article.

Ethical consideration

Ethical clearance to conduct the study was obtained from the University of Limpopo ( TREC/14/2014) on 31 October 2019.

Funding information

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

Data availability statement

Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no new data were created or analysed in this study.

Disclaimer

The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and not an official position of the University of Limpopo and the University of Johannesburg.

 

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Correspondence:
Solomon Mashegoane
solomon.mashegoane@ul.ac.za

Received: 29 Mar. 2018
Accepted: 19 Oct. 2019
Published: 02 Apr. 2020

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