Using a Deliberative Poll on breast cancer screening to assess and improve the decision quality of laypeople

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Using a Deliberative Poll on breast cancer screening to assess and improve the decision quality of laypeople. / Jensen, Manja D.; Hansen, Kasper M.; Siersma, Volkert; Brodersen, John.

I: PLoS ONE, Bind 16, Nr. 10 , e0258869, 2021.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Jensen, MD, Hansen, KM, Siersma, V & Brodersen, J 2021, 'Using a Deliberative Poll on breast cancer screening to assess and improve the decision quality of laypeople', PLoS ONE, bind 16, nr. 10 , e0258869. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258869

APA

Jensen, M. D., Hansen, K. M., Siersma, V., & Brodersen, J. (2021). Using a Deliberative Poll on breast cancer screening to assess and improve the decision quality of laypeople. PLoS ONE, 16(10 ), [e0258869]. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258869

Vancouver

Jensen MD, Hansen KM, Siersma V, Brodersen J. Using a Deliberative Poll on breast cancer screening to assess and improve the decision quality of laypeople. PLoS ONE. 2021;16(10 ). e0258869. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258869

Author

Jensen, Manja D. ; Hansen, Kasper M. ; Siersma, Volkert ; Brodersen, John. / Using a Deliberative Poll on breast cancer screening to assess and improve the decision quality of laypeople. I: PLoS ONE. 2021 ; Bind 16, Nr. 10 .

Bibtex

@article{db2eebb85d4049fd8a58973f4cb32b2b,
title = "Using a Deliberative Poll on breast cancer screening to assess and improve the decision quality of laypeople",
abstract = "Balancing the benefits and harms of mammography screening is difficult and involves a value judgement. Screening is both a medical and a social intervention, therefore public opinion could be considered when deciding if mammography screening programmes should be implemented and continued. Opinion polls have revealed high levels of public enthusiasm for cancer screening, however, the public tends to overestimate the benefits and underestimate the harms. In the search for better public decision on mammography screening, this study investigated the quality of public opinion arising from a Deliberative Poll. In a Deliberative Poll a representative group of people is brought together to deliberate with each other and with experts based on specific information. Before, during and after the process, the participants' opinions are assessed. In our Deliberative Poll a representative sample of the Danish population aged between 18 and 70 participated. They studied an online video and took part in five hours of intense online deliberation. We used survey data at four timepoints during the study, from recruitment to one month after the poll, to estimate the quality of decisions by the following outcomes: 1) Knowledge; 2) Ability to form opinions; 3) Opinion stability, and 4) Opinion consistency. The proportion of participants with a high level of knowledge increased from 1% at recruitment to 56% after receiving video information. More people formed an opinion regarding the effectiveness of the screening programme (12%), the economy of the programme (27%), and the ethical dilemmas of screening (10%) due to the process of information and deliberation. For 11 out of 14 opinion items, the withinitem correlations between the first two inquiry time points were smaller than the correlations between later timepoints. This indicates increased opinion stability. The correlations between three pairs of opinion items deemed theoretically related a priori all increased, indicating increased opinion consistency. Overall, the combined process of online information and deliberation increased opinion quality about mammography screening by increasing knowledge and the ability to form stable and consistent opinions.",
author = "Jensen, {Manja D.} and Hansen, {Kasper M.} and Volkert Siersma and John Brodersen",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 Jensen et al.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0258869",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "10 ",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Using a Deliberative Poll on breast cancer screening to assess and improve the decision quality of laypeople

AU - Jensen, Manja D.

AU - Hansen, Kasper M.

AU - Siersma, Volkert

AU - Brodersen, John

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021 Jensen et al.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Balancing the benefits and harms of mammography screening is difficult and involves a value judgement. Screening is both a medical and a social intervention, therefore public opinion could be considered when deciding if mammography screening programmes should be implemented and continued. Opinion polls have revealed high levels of public enthusiasm for cancer screening, however, the public tends to overestimate the benefits and underestimate the harms. In the search for better public decision on mammography screening, this study investigated the quality of public opinion arising from a Deliberative Poll. In a Deliberative Poll a representative group of people is brought together to deliberate with each other and with experts based on specific information. Before, during and after the process, the participants' opinions are assessed. In our Deliberative Poll a representative sample of the Danish population aged between 18 and 70 participated. They studied an online video and took part in five hours of intense online deliberation. We used survey data at four timepoints during the study, from recruitment to one month after the poll, to estimate the quality of decisions by the following outcomes: 1) Knowledge; 2) Ability to form opinions; 3) Opinion stability, and 4) Opinion consistency. The proportion of participants with a high level of knowledge increased from 1% at recruitment to 56% after receiving video information. More people formed an opinion regarding the effectiveness of the screening programme (12%), the economy of the programme (27%), and the ethical dilemmas of screening (10%) due to the process of information and deliberation. For 11 out of 14 opinion items, the withinitem correlations between the first two inquiry time points were smaller than the correlations between later timepoints. This indicates increased opinion stability. The correlations between three pairs of opinion items deemed theoretically related a priori all increased, indicating increased opinion consistency. Overall, the combined process of online information and deliberation increased opinion quality about mammography screening by increasing knowledge and the ability to form stable and consistent opinions.

AB - Balancing the benefits and harms of mammography screening is difficult and involves a value judgement. Screening is both a medical and a social intervention, therefore public opinion could be considered when deciding if mammography screening programmes should be implemented and continued. Opinion polls have revealed high levels of public enthusiasm for cancer screening, however, the public tends to overestimate the benefits and underestimate the harms. In the search for better public decision on mammography screening, this study investigated the quality of public opinion arising from a Deliberative Poll. In a Deliberative Poll a representative group of people is brought together to deliberate with each other and with experts based on specific information. Before, during and after the process, the participants' opinions are assessed. In our Deliberative Poll a representative sample of the Danish population aged between 18 and 70 participated. They studied an online video and took part in five hours of intense online deliberation. We used survey data at four timepoints during the study, from recruitment to one month after the poll, to estimate the quality of decisions by the following outcomes: 1) Knowledge; 2) Ability to form opinions; 3) Opinion stability, and 4) Opinion consistency. The proportion of participants with a high level of knowledge increased from 1% at recruitment to 56% after receiving video information. More people formed an opinion regarding the effectiveness of the screening programme (12%), the economy of the programme (27%), and the ethical dilemmas of screening (10%) due to the process of information and deliberation. For 11 out of 14 opinion items, the withinitem correlations between the first two inquiry time points were smaller than the correlations between later timepoints. This indicates increased opinion stability. The correlations between three pairs of opinion items deemed theoretically related a priori all increased, indicating increased opinion consistency. Overall, the combined process of online information and deliberation increased opinion quality about mammography screening by increasing knowledge and the ability to form stable and consistent opinions.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0258869

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0258869

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34673826

AN - SCOPUS:85117765419

VL - 16

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 10

M1 - e0258869

ER -

ID: 286625585