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Engaging the Public on the Use of Evidence: The Role of Public Deliberation

AHRQ's 2012 Annual Conference Slide Presentation

On September 9, 2012, Kristin L. Carman, PhD, and Maureen Maurer, MPH, made this presentation at the 2012 Annual Conference.

Select to access the PowerPoint® presentation (310 KB).

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Engaging the Public on the Use of Evidence: The Role of Public Deliberation

Kristin L. Carman, PhD
Maureen Maurer, MPH

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Session Objectives

  • Explain public deliberation and application in health care.
  • Identify best practices for successful public deliberation.
  • Describe AHRQ's Community Forum deliberative methods experiment.

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Reasons For This Work

  • 3-year, ARRA-funded initiative of Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
  • Seeks to:
    1. Expand the evidence base about public deliberation.
    2. Obtain public input on a topic of value to AHRQ: the use of evidence in health care decisionmaking.

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Overview of Public Deliberation

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What is Public Deliberation?

  • Public consultation approach.
  • Involves lay members of the public.
  • Includes an educational component and a discussion-based (or deliberative) component.
  • Suited for ethical or values-based social issues.
  • Concerned with the "greater good" or societal interests.

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Core Elements of Public Deliberation

Image: A chart shows the following process:

Convene:

  • Individuals from a broad range of perspectives gather through live or virtual channels.

Learn:

  • Objective overview of background, issues, and options are presented.

Deliberate:

  • Participants exchange reasons, perspectives, and values.

Outcome: Impact on individual participants.

Report:

  • A summary or transcript of deliberation prepared for decisionmakers.

Outcome: Impact on civic decisionmaking.

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How Deliberation Differs From Other Public Consultation Methods

  • Educational.
  • Participant-based dialogue.
  • Reason-based.
  • Societal perspective & mutual responsibility.
  • Challenging.

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Examples of Deliberative Methods

  • Citizens' Jury.
  • Citizens' Panel /Council.
  • Deliberative Focus Group.
  • Deliberative Poll®.
  • Issues Forum.
  • Study Circles.
  • Town Hall.
  • Hybrid approaches.

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How Deliberative Methods Vary

  • Group size, participant sample.
  • Length, duration.
  • Mode (online, in-person).
  • Recruitment method.
  • Use of educational materials and experts.
  • Facilitation.
  • Consensus as goal.

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What Are the Outcomes Public Deliberation?

  • Informed public input to the sponsor:
    • Summary of important themes in participants' views.
    • Can be used to inform policy, programmatic, or other decisions.

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What Are the Outcomes Public Deliberation? (cont.)

  • Impact on participants:
    • Increased knowledge of the deliberative topic.
    • Change in attitudes on deliberative topic.
    • Increased willingness to participate in civic activities.
    • Adoption of societal concerns / shift from personal preferences.

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Application in Health Care

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Real-world Applications of Deliberative Methods

  • Examples:
    • Developing a fair cost-sharing structure (Ginsburg et al., 2012).
    • Priority-setting social and health interventions (Pesce et al., 2011).

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Developing a Fair Cost-sharing Structure

  • Issue: Cost-sharing (deductibles, co-payments) can have varying financial impact on patients depending on their health care needs. What is the fairest way to structure cost-sharing when there is diversity of needs?
  • Researchers: The California Health Benefit Exchange and the Center for Healthcare Decisions.
  • Goals: Learn how future Exchange users prioritize the health care needs that should have greatest consideration for affordable cost-sharing.
  • Evaluation: Assess response to participating in the deliberative process and its importance as input to the design of new health insurance programs.

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Prioritizing Interventions

  • Issue: How would you determine which social or health services to provide to improve health?
  • Researchers: National Institutes of Health, Howard University, and D.C. Department of Health.
  • Goals: Learn how participants prioritize social or health services to improve health and understand their reasoning.
  • Evaluation: Assess deliberative process and whether deliberation affected participants' knowledge on the determinants of health.

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Best Practices for Successful Public Deliberation

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What Conditions Enable Good Public Deliberation?

  • Clear deliberative goals.
  • Participant trust in the process and outcomes.
  • Accurate, unbiased information (education, experts).
  • Reason-giving.
  • Diversity.

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Design Considerations

  • Setting goals.
  • Identifying and recruiting participants.
  • Selecting deliberative process or method.
  • Educating session participants.
  • Facilitating sessions.
  • Synthesizing output.

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Areas for Further Study

  • Understanding what works best:
    • Understanding impact on decisionmakers and policy.
    • Which deliberative methods work best.
  • How to address inequalities within context of deliberation:
    • Recruitment strategies and incentives.
    • Measuring equal participation.
    • Language considerations.

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Check In

  • Questions so far...
  • Discussion:
    • What issues do you see as appropriate for deliberation?

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AHRQ's Community Forum Experiment

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Deliberative Methods Experiment: RCT

Image: A chart shows the following process conducted for a randomized controlled trial (RCT):

  • Eligible Participants Randomized:
    • Deliberative Methods: N=960:
      • Pre/Post K&A Survey:
        • DM vs. Control, Compare DMs.
      • Deliberative Experiences Survey:
        • Compare DMs to each other.
      • Qualitative Data:
        • Compare DMs to each other.
    • Control: N=336:
      • Pre/Post K&A Survey:
        • DM vs. Control.

76 deliberative groups in 4 U.S. cities in 4 months.

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Deliberative Methods Experiment: RCT

Experimental conditionCharacteristics
Brief Citizens' Deliberation (BCD)2 hours in-person
Online Deliberative Polling® (ODP)5 hours online
Meets 1.25 hours per week for 4 weeks
Q & A with experts via teleconference
Community Deliberation (CD)5 hours in-person,
Meets for 2 in-person sessions with a week in between
Q& A online postings with experts
Citizens' Panel (CP)20 hours in-person
Meets for 3 consecutive days
Presentations and Q & A with experts
Control groupReceives educational materials to review at home

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Overarching Deliberative Question

  • Deliberate on the use of evidence in healthcare decisionmaking:
    • Should individual patients and/or their doctors be able to make any health decisions no matter what the evidence of medical effectiveness shows, or should society ever specify some boundaries for these decisions?
  • Will explore 3 "variations" on the theme:
    • Decisionmaking to encourage better health care.
    • Decisionmaking when there are cost implications.
    • Decisionmaking when there are complex societal tradeoffs.

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Sub-questions by Variation

VariationsExample Questions
Better Health Care:Should doctors and patients be able to make decision about medical care, regardless of what the research says?
Cost:Should there be limits on patient choice when less expensive options are available that work as well?
Societal Trade-off:What is the duty of society to protect patients from possible harm?

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Deliberative Questions Across Methods

Experimental conditionCase StudyVariation
Brief Citizens' Deliberation (BCD)
  • Hospital quality.
  • Better health care.
  • Societal tradeoff.
Online Deliberative Polling® (ODP)
  • Hospital quality.
  • Better health care.
  • Cost implication.
  • Societal tradeoff.
Community Deliberation (CD)
  • Hospital quality.
  • URI.
  • Better health care.
  • Societal tradeoff.
Citizens' Panel (CP)
  • Hospital quality.
  • URI
  • Better health care.
  • Cost implication.
  • Societal tradeoff.

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Overview Community Forum Evaluation

Research questionPrimary outcomesMeasurement
Is public deliberation more or less effective than education only?Changes in knowledge and attitudesQuantitative (survey)
Which method(s) are most effective? In what ways? And why?Changes in knowledge and attitudes
 

Quantitative (survey)
 

Quality of experience (process elements) and contentCombination

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Overall Process For Evaluation

Image: A flowchart shows the following process:

  • Determine measurement approach:
    • Develop surveys:
      • Collect survey data & analyze:
        • Combine data for further analysis.
    • Develop codebook for transcripts:
      • Code & analyze transcripts:
        • Combine data for further analysis.
    • Develop debrief forms:
      • Analyze observation data:
        • Combine data for further analysis.

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    Quantitative Analysis: Mapping Concepts to Surveys

    SurveyGroupMeasure
    Pre/Post Knowledge & Attitude SurveyDeliberative methods and controlParticipants' knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs about the deliberative issue
    Post Deliberative Experience SurveyDeliberative methods onlyDiscourse quality (e.g., equal participation, tolerance of different perspectives, reasoned justification of ideas)

    Implementation quality (e.g., quality of facilitation, materials, and presentations)


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    Qualitative Analysis: Aims

    1. Summarize values and ethical principles cited by participants.
    2. Assess whether values and ethical principles differ by method.

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    Qualitative Analysis: Approach

    Focus of analysesData sourceApproach
    Thematic analysis:
    1. Ethics and values.
    2. Acceptable boundaries.
    3. Factors.
    Transcripts

    Coding—descriptive and interpretive coding

    Summarized for all groups and then used in comparisons between specific methods.

    Quality of process: Aspects affecting nature of deliberationTranscripts & debrief forms

    Coding—descriptive and interpretive coding; counts of occurrences

    Used in comparisons between specific methods.


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    How the Public Views the Application of Evidence

    • What and how does the public think about applying medical evidence?
    • What matters most to the public?
    • How can public input be used to inform CER?

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    Integrating Quantitative and Qualitative Analyses

    QuantitativeQualitative
    Relatively high or low scores on Deliberative Experience survey for certain methods—or groupsDeliberative quality/ process elements (e.g., equal opportunity to participate)
    Differences in knowledge and attitudes scores on K & A survey for certain methods—or groupsDeliberative content (e.g., shifts, emphasis on educational materials or expert contributions)
    Differences in societal vs. individual perspective based on attitude questionsDeliberative quality and content (e.g., emphasis on societal perspective, articulation of overall question)

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    Next Steps and Resources

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Key Contacts

  • American Institutes for Research:
    • Kristin L. Carman, Project Director:
      • kcarman@air.org.
    • Maureen Maurer:
      • mmaurer@air.org.
  • AHRQ:
    • Joanna Siegel, Project Officer:
      • Joanna.Siegel@ahrq.hhs.gov, 301-427-1969.

AHRQ's Effective Health Care Program site:
http://www.effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/index.cfm/tools-and-resources/

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Questions?

Page last reviewed December 2012
Internet Citation: Engaging the Public on the Use of Evidence: The Role of Public Deliberation: AHRQ's 2012 Annual Conference Slide Presentation. December 2012. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. https://archive.ahrq.gov/news/events/conference/2012/track_c/26_carman_maurer/carman.html

 

The information on this page is archived and provided for reference purposes only.

 

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