Barbour, R.S. (1999) The case for combining qualitative and quantiative approaches in health service research . Journal of Health Services Research Policy4, 39–43 .
2.
Bazeley, P. (1999) The bricoleur with a computer: Piecing together qualitative and quantitative data . Qualitative Health Research6:2: 279–297 .
3.
Bryman, A. (2006) Editorial . Qualitative Research6:1, 5–7 .
4.
Coxon, T. (2005) Integrating qualitative and quantitative data: What does the user need?Qualitative Social Research6: 2-2 .
5.
DeMarco, R. (2002) Two theories/a sharper lens: the staff nurse voice in the workplace . Journal of Advanced Nursing38:6, 549–556 .
6.
Freshwater, D. (2005) Reading Mixed Methods Research: Contexts for Criticism . Paper presented at the Mixed Methods Research Conference, July. Cambridge, UK.
7.
Mark, A. (1993) Researching the doctor-managerchoosing valid methodologies . Journal of Management in Medicine7:4, 52–59 .
8.
Mason, J. (2006) Mixing methods in a qualitatively driven way . Qualitative Research6:1, 9–25 .
9.
Moran-Ellis, J. , Alexander, V.D. , Cronin, A. , Dickinson, M. , Fielding, J. , Sleney, J. , Thomas, H. (2006) Triangulation and integration: Processes, claims and implications . Qualitative Research6:1, 45–59 .
10.
Pawson, R. (1995) Quality and quantity, agency and structure, mechanisms and context, dons and cons . BMS47, 5–48 .
11.
Risjord, M.W. , Dunbar, S.B. , Moloney, M.F. (2002) A new foundation for methodological triangulation . Journal of Nursing Scholarship34:3, 269–275 .