
doi: 10.1111/hex.12493
pmid: 27704684
pmc: PMC5513001
handle: 2123/15758 , 2440/123729 , 10072/409565 , 2328/37384
doi: 10.1111/hex.12493
pmid: 27704684
pmc: PMC5513001
handle: 2123/15758 , 2440/123729 , 10072/409565 , 2328/37384
AbstractBackgroundOpportunities for community members to actively participate in policy development are increasing. Community/citizen's juries (CJs) are a deliberative democratic process aimed to illicit informed community perspectives on difficult topics. But how comprehensive these processes are reported in peer‐reviewed literature is unknown. Adequate reporting of methodology enables others to judge process quality, compare outcomes, facilitate critical reflection and potentially repeat a process. We aimed to identify important elements for reporting CJs, to develop an initial checklist and to review published health and health policy CJs to examine reporting standards.DesignUsing the literature and expertise from CJ researchers and policy advisors, a list of important CJ reporting items was suggested and further refined. We then reviewed published CJs within the health literature and used the checklist to assess the comprehensiveness of reporting.ResultsCJCheck was developed and examined reporting of CJ planning, juror information, procedures and scheduling. We screened 1711 studies and extracted data from 38. No studies fully reported the checklist items. The item most consistently reported was juror numbers (92%, 35/38), while least reported was the availability of expert presentations (5%, 2/38). Recruitment strategies were described in 66% of studies (25/38); however, the frequency and timing of deliberations was inadequately described (29%, 11/38).ConclusionsCurrently CJ publications in health and health policy literature are inadequately reported, hampering their use in policy making. We propose broadening the CJCheck by creating a reporting standards template in collaboration with international CJ researchers, policy advisors and consumer representatives to ensure standardized, systematic and transparent reporting.
CJCheck, Delphi Technique, analysis, reporting standards, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Community jury, Psychology, process, Policy Making, Public health, reporting, Health Policy, Reporting standards, 1996-2015, Public, Community/citizen's juries, testing, Checklist, Health Policy & Services, community, Public Health, published, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, 610, -, Nursing, Environmental & Occupational Health, Education, Health services and systems, Humans, development, Science & Technology, Community participation, juries, Community Participation, citizen jury, stage, studies, citizens' jury, delphi, Health Care Sciences & Services, community jury, 306, Citizen jury, 1:, cjcheck, Community/citizen's juries (CJs), checklist, Original Research Papers
CJCheck, Delphi Technique, analysis, reporting standards, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Community jury, Psychology, process, Policy Making, Public health, reporting, Health Policy, Reporting standards, 1996-2015, Public, Community/citizen's juries, testing, Checklist, Health Policy & Services, community, Public Health, published, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, 610, -, Nursing, Environmental & Occupational Health, Education, Health services and systems, Humans, development, Science & Technology, Community participation, juries, Community Participation, citizen jury, stage, studies, citizens' jury, delphi, Health Care Sciences & Services, community jury, 306, Citizen jury, 1:, cjcheck, Community/citizen's juries (CJs), checklist, Original Research Papers
| selected citations These citations are derived from selected sources. This is an alternative to the "Influence" indicator, which also reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | 34 | |
| popularity This indicator reflects the "current" impact/attention (the "hype") of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network. | Top 10% | |
| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Top 10% | |
| impulse This indicator reflects the initial momentum of an article directly after its publication, based on the underlying citation network. | Top 10% |
