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In this session, we explore methodological issues, and notably whether and to what extent a pluralistic approach to methods in the health sciences is a way to maximise understanding or instead to multiply complexity. Why do we need multiple methodological approaches? What do we gain? And is there a price worth paying?
Event details of Methodological pluralism in the health sciences: maximizing understanding or multiplying complexity? (online)
Date
8 November 2022
Time
14:00 -15:00
Organised by
Federica Russo
Karien Stronks

Speakers

Joost Oude Groeninger, Ria Reis

About the series

Health is notoriously a complex phenomenon. Questions about what health and disease are, how they spread across individuals and populations, and how we can intervene to reduce the burden of disease have been approached from very different disciplinary, conceptual, and methodological perspective. In this seminar series, we continue the conversation on human health complexity that was initiated at IAS during Spring 2022. We focus on questions about problems, concepts & methods, and data. Our goal is to contribute to exchanging ideas and approaches, and gradually building what may be called distinctively a ‘complexity approach’ in the health sciences.

The series is composed of 1 on-site event and of 3 online events with the following dates and topics.

Scheduled sessions

  • 11.10.2022, 14:30 - 17:00 (on-site): Human Health Complexity: problems, concepts & methods, data
  • 08.11.2022, 14:00 - 15:00 (online): Methodological pluralism in the health sciences: maximizing understanding or multiplying complexity?
  • 22.11.2022, 15:00 - 16:00 (online): Which data to collect? Volume vs type
  • 06.12.2022, 14:00 - 15:00 (online): Complex problems vs easy solutions 

Please register for each session separately, as we aim to keep the group to a manageable size.