Integration with prior work, implications, transferability, and contribution(s) to the field
Describe how the findings and conclusions connect to, support, elaborate on, or challenge previous findings, experiences, theory, or a guiding paradigm or approach.1
Describe how the findings contribute to or advance the field.
Describe any implications of the work, such transferability or generalizability. ## Justification and Examples
Why readers need this information
The short summary reminds readers of the main findings and may help them assess whether the subsequent interpretation and implications formulated by the authors are supported by the findings.
Examples
This study contributes to the understanding and discussion of the complexity of involving patients in healthcare education. It shows that integrating patient-led teaching into initiatives that are partly faculty-led influences the way in which students perceive learning from and with PIs. What is not known, however, is whether perceptions are also affected by type of health profession and the students’ different orientation towards logics of care and science, and issues of authority and power relations.
For complete examples of Discussions, see:
Footnotes
The discussion provides authors an opportunity to elaborate on their findings in relation to their research question(s) and study purpose(s); connect their findings to prior empirical work, theories, and/or frameworks; and discuss implications.↩︎
Citation
@misc{o'brien2023,
author = {O’Brien, Bridget and Harris, Ilene and Beckman, Thomas and
Reed, Darcy and Cook, David},
title = {The {SRQR} Guidelines for Writing Qualitative Research
Articles Version 1.1},
version = {1.1},
date = {},
doi = {10.1234/equator/1010101},
langid = {en}
}