GreenJ.ThorogoodN. (2009). Qualitative methods for health research (2nd ed.).
London, England:
SAGE.
2.
HennickM. M.KaiserB. N.MarconiV. C. (2017).
Code saturation versus meaning saturation: How many interviews are enough?Qualitative Health Research,
27(4), 591–608.
3.
MalterudK.SiersmaV. D.GuassoraA. D. (2016).
Sample size in qualitative interview studies: Guided by information power. Qualitative Health Research,
26(13), 1753–1760.
4.
MorseJ. M. (2015).
Data were saturated … [Editorial]. Qualitative Health Research,
25(5), 587–588.
5.
O’BrienB. C.HarrisI. B.BeckmanT. J.ReedD. A.CookD. A. (2014).
Standards for reporting qualitative research: A synthesis of recommendations. Academic Medicine,
89(9), 1245–1251.
6.
O’ReillyM.ParkerN. (2013).
Unsatisfactory saturation: A critical exploration of the notion of saturated sample sizes in qualitative research. Qualitative Research,
13(2), 190–197.
7.
SaundersB.SimJ.KingstoneT.BakerS.WaterfieldJ.BartlamB., . . . JinksC. (2018).
Saturation in qualitative research: Exploring its conceptualization and operationalization. Quality & Quantity,
52(4), 1893–1907.
8.
ThorneS. (2016). Interpretive description: Qualitative research for applied practice (2nd ed.).
New York, NY:
Routledge.
9.
ThorneS.DarbyshireP. (2005).
Landmines in the field: A modest proposal for improving the craft of qualitative health research. Qualitative Health Research,
15, 1105–1113.
10.
ThorneS.StephensJ.TruantT. (2016).
Building qualitative design using nursing’s disciplinary epistemology. Journal of Advanced Nursing,
72(2), 451–460.
11.
TongA.SainsburyP.CraigJ. (2007).
Consolidated criteria for reporting research (COREQ): A 32-item checklist for interviews and focus groups. International Journal for Quality in Health Care,
19(6), 349–357.