Wednesday 25 September 2013

Let’s use what’s already out there

Guest post from: Professor Jonathan Scourfield, Cardiff School of Social Sciences



My general pitch in writing this blog is to argue that social care researchers could make much more use out of existing data sources. Typically when our MA Social Work students are thinking about possible small-scale empirical projects they can carry out, they assume they need to collect their own data. Now the problem with collecting your own data is that it is very time-consuming and a busy Masters student (or indeed a busy practitioner researcher or academic researcher) might just find their data coverage ends up being disappointing. What a lot of people don't realise is that there are some large-scale data out there already collected that can be used for further research. 

The UK Data Archive has lots of fabulous data sets which are cruelly under-used. In this paper  we looked at the major UK panel and cohort studies conducted over many years to see which included data on social work services. The questions about social work contact were typically very limited, but there were seven studies with some potential for social work research. In a new project  funded by the Nuffield Foundation, which you can find here , we'll be seeing what we can do with four of these studies. 


A recently completed example, using a cross-sectional survey, is that Tom Slater used a psychiatric morbidity study for his PhD on social workers' role in preventing suicide , available here 
  . This data set is freely available to anyone registered with a UK university. No special permissions are needed and all data are already anonymised. Although many of the data set in the UK Data Archive require statistical analysis, there are also qualitative data sets available for secondary analysis. These include such classic social work studies as Dingwall et al's well known ethnographic research from the late 1970s-early 1980s 'The Protection of Children' and Townsend's research on the family lives of older people.

Routine social care data are the other major source for secondary research. Social care providers of course keep data on service users and these data can be used for research purposes, up to a point. I say up to a point because of course it is not appropriate for just anyone to have access to someone's personal records. But it is possible to produce anonymised versions of quantitative data with all identifying details removed. Even routine data which are more qualitative, and therefore more difficult to anonymise, can be used for research purposes in some circumstances. Nowadays there are also potential opportunities to link routine social care data with anonymised health records, for example via the SAIL databank at Swansea here . A couple of new research projects in Welsh universities are about to do just that, with the support of NISCHR, and I look forward to seeing the results.

Watch Professor Scourfield talk about his research:








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