Data and data illustrations supporting the analysis of transcripts from interviews exploring the views and experiences of young men and their parents/guardians regarding testicular health.

Evidence shows young men have poor outcomes from testicular torsion directly attributable to delay in presentation to hospital [1]. Only a third to a half of adolescents present within 6 h with testicular pain, [2,3] There is poor understanding of why adolescents delay in presenting with testicular...

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Main Authors: Caroline MacDonald, Maria Burton, Robert Carachi, Stuart O'Toole
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-10-01
Series:Data in Brief
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340920310003
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spelling doaj-87b84ec7a5074173ab58a4b93ccf0b252020-11-25T02:42:08ZengElsevierData in Brief2352-34092020-10-0132106106Data and data illustrations supporting the analysis of transcripts from interviews exploring the views and experiences of young men and their parents/guardians regarding testicular health.Caroline MacDonald0Maria Burton1Robert Carachi2Stuart O'Toole3School of MVLS, University of Glasgow, University Avenue, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United Kingdom; Royal Hospital for Children, 1345 Govan Rd, Glasgow G51 4TF, United Kingdom; Corresponding author.Faculty of Health and Wellbeing, Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield S1 1WB, United KingdomSchool of MVLS, University of Glasgow, University Avenue, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United KingdomSchool of MVLS, University of Glasgow, University Avenue, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United Kingdom; Royal Hospital for Children, 1345 Govan Rd, Glasgow G51 4TF, United KingdomEvidence shows young men have poor outcomes from testicular torsion directly attributable to delay in presentation to hospital [1]. Only a third to a half of adolescents present within 6 h with testicular pain, [2,3] There is poor understanding of why adolescents delay in presenting with testicular pain. The authors started without an a-priori hypothesis and designed a thematic qualitative research protocol to explore the phenomena is a naturalistic setting [4,5] . Sixteen young men (11–19 years) and their parents or guardians underwent semi-structured interviews, directed by a topic guide which evolved with subsequent interview findings. Young men were recruited from out of school clubs to minimise the bias associated with schools or hospital recruitment, and were naïve to testicular disease. Verbatim transcriptions were coded, categories and themes formed and final concepts derived utilising a framework methodology. The figure included shows the initial topic guide. The data tables presented show the emergent themes and the final code book. The authors have utilised the analysis to explore the factors impeding young men in presenting early to hospital with testicular pain [6]. The authors feel the data tables and raw data will be of interest to other researchers interested in adolescent health, health access, public health, linguistics and healthcare qualitative methodology.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340920310003Testicular torsionAdolescent health accessAdolescent healthTesticular healthQualitative research
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Caroline MacDonald
Maria Burton
Robert Carachi
Stuart O'Toole
spellingShingle Caroline MacDonald
Maria Burton
Robert Carachi
Stuart O'Toole
Data and data illustrations supporting the analysis of transcripts from interviews exploring the views and experiences of young men and their parents/guardians regarding testicular health.
Data in Brief
Testicular torsion
Adolescent health access
Adolescent health
Testicular health
Qualitative research
author_facet Caroline MacDonald
Maria Burton
Robert Carachi
Stuart O'Toole
author_sort Caroline MacDonald
title Data and data illustrations supporting the analysis of transcripts from interviews exploring the views and experiences of young men and their parents/guardians regarding testicular health.
title_short Data and data illustrations supporting the analysis of transcripts from interviews exploring the views and experiences of young men and their parents/guardians regarding testicular health.
title_full Data and data illustrations supporting the analysis of transcripts from interviews exploring the views and experiences of young men and their parents/guardians regarding testicular health.
title_fullStr Data and data illustrations supporting the analysis of transcripts from interviews exploring the views and experiences of young men and their parents/guardians regarding testicular health.
title_full_unstemmed Data and data illustrations supporting the analysis of transcripts from interviews exploring the views and experiences of young men and their parents/guardians regarding testicular health.
title_sort data and data illustrations supporting the analysis of transcripts from interviews exploring the views and experiences of young men and their parents/guardians regarding testicular health.
publisher Elsevier
series Data in Brief
issn 2352-3409
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Evidence shows young men have poor outcomes from testicular torsion directly attributable to delay in presentation to hospital [1]. Only a third to a half of adolescents present within 6 h with testicular pain, [2,3] There is poor understanding of why adolescents delay in presenting with testicular pain. The authors started without an a-priori hypothesis and designed a thematic qualitative research protocol to explore the phenomena is a naturalistic setting [4,5] . Sixteen young men (11–19 years) and their parents or guardians underwent semi-structured interviews, directed by a topic guide which evolved with subsequent interview findings. Young men were recruited from out of school clubs to minimise the bias associated with schools or hospital recruitment, and were naïve to testicular disease. Verbatim transcriptions were coded, categories and themes formed and final concepts derived utilising a framework methodology. The figure included shows the initial topic guide. The data tables presented show the emergent themes and the final code book. The authors have utilised the analysis to explore the factors impeding young men in presenting early to hospital with testicular pain [6]. The authors feel the data tables and raw data will be of interest to other researchers interested in adolescent health, health access, public health, linguistics and healthcare qualitative methodology.
topic Testicular torsion
Adolescent health access
Adolescent health
Testicular health
Qualitative research
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340920310003
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