# Reimagining the role of emotion in healthcare research

**Authors:** Rebekah Cole

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.qrmh.2025.100033 · 2025-12-11

## TL;DR

This paper argues that emotions in healthcare research should be acknowledged and integrated into training and ethics to improve research quality and researcher well-being.

## Contribution

The paper introduces emotional reflexivity as a novel methodological and ethical framework for qualitative healthcare research.

## Key findings

- Emotions are central to qualitative research but are often ignored in training and ethics.
- Emotional reflexivity can enhance ethical clarity and research rigor in healthcare studies.
- Emotionally responsive practices are needed to prevent researcher burnout and improve sustainability.

## Abstract

Qualitative healthcare research often involves emotionally charged topics, such as trauma, illness, loss, moral injury, that profoundly affect researchers as well as participants. Yet the personal and emotional experiences of researchers are frequently excluded from formal training, ethical oversight, and methodological discourse.

This commentary explores emotional reflexivity as a core methodological, ethical, and pedagogical dimension of qualitative research in health care. It asserts that researcher emotions are vital sources of insight, ethical awareness, and relational depth, particularly in clinical, psychological, and trauma-informed research settings.

Drawing from feminist standpoint theory, affect theory, and post-qualitative inquiry, this paper synthesizes conceptual literature, cross-disciplinary insights, and a personal fieldwork vignette from qualitative research with Ukrainian military healthcare professionals. Finally, it presents a framework for emotional engagement throughout the research process.

Emotions shape every stage of qualitative research. When unacknowledged, emotions may contribute to researcher distress or burnout. This commentary highlights the need for emotionally responsive training models, research team practices, and IRB protocols that address participant and researcher vulnerability. It also offers pedagogical strategies and draws parallels to emotionally intensive fields such as counseling, chaplaincy, and medicine.

Emotionally reflexive practice enhances ethical clarity, deepens qualitative rigor, and promotes long-term sustainability in health research careers. As qualitative inquiry continues to shape healthcare policy, education, and practice, researcher emotional engagement must be reimagined as an ethical and methodological asset.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** trauma (MESH:D014947), moral injury (MESH:D013313)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12813594