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      Be my guest! Challenges and practical solutions of undertaking interviews with children in the home setting.

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          Abstract

          This article aims to share critical debate on undertaking interviews with children in the home setting and draws on the authors' extensive research fieldwork. The article focuses on three key processes: planning entry to the child's home, conducting the interviews and exiting the field. In planning entry, we include children's engagement and issues of researcher gender. In conducting the interviews, we consider issues such as the balance of power, the importance of building a rapport, the voluntary nature of consent and the need for a flexible interview structure. Finally, we address exiting from the child's home with sensitivity at the end of the interview and/or research study. Undertaking research in the child's home provides a known and familiar territory for the child, but it means that the researcher faces a number of challenges that require solutions whilst they are a guest in a child's home.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Child Health Care
          Journal of child health care : for professionals working with children in the hospital and community
          SAGE Publications
          1741-2889
          1367-4935
          Dec 2015
          : 19
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Coventry University, UK jane.coad@coventry.ac.uk.
          [2 ] Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Trust; London South Bank University, UK.
          [3 ] London South Bank University, UK.
          [4 ] The University of Manchester, UK.
          [5 ] University of Salford, UK.
          [6 ] University of Central Lancashire; Alder Hey Children's NHSFT, UK & University of Tasmania, Australia.
          Article
          1367493514527653
          10.1177/1367493514527653
          24812062
          ba5b2f42-2cf2-4e07-8d2e-e763082211d2
          History

          interviews,fieldwork,health,qualitative approaches,Children
          interviews, fieldwork, health, qualitative approaches, Children

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