I. Heyman, DIFFERENT PARADIGMS IN A NEW RESEARCH DOMAIN - THE CASE OF NURSING RESEARCH ON DIABETES IN SWEDEN, Scandinavian journal of caring sciences, 10(4), 1996, pp. 242-246
The aim of this study was to examine doctoral theses written by nurses
on the same subject, namely diabetes. The five theses were published
during three years. The text analysis emphasized the purposes, theoret
ical framing, methods for collection and analyzing the data, ways of p
resenting the texts and, finally, the references in the five theses. T
he findings indicate that the authors make use of different paradigms.
Experimental approach was used in some theses and one thesis was base
d on grounded theory. Two theses could be said to be more concise than
the others because they made use of only one technique each-physiolog
ical measurements and an open-ended interview. The remainder used of a
number of methods-in other words, they were eclectic in approach. The
conclusion is that there is a freedom for nurse researcher to affilia
te to different scientific traditions inside academia-the two in quest
ion here are biomedical research and interpretative traditions inside
social science. The author encourage all researchers inside the nursin
g domain to subject herself to criticism and reflection to the same ex
tent as she analyzes other people or phenomena in order to increase th
e epistemological awareness of the use of research tools, perspectives
and theories.