Table 1.
Characteristic | Community Deliberation (CD) | Citizens’ Panel (CP) |
---|---|---|
Number of groups | 24 groups | Four groups |
Average number of participants per group | 12 participants per group | 24 participants per group |
Structure and intensity | 6 h total; two 2.5‐h sessions 1 wk apart with 1‐h average online time between sessions | 20 h total over 2.5 consecutive days; two 8‐h days and one 4‐h day |
Mode of communication | Face to face; asynchronous online communication between sessions | Face to face |
Facilitation | Active facilitation by individuals trained on topics such as encouraging equal participation, eliciting opposing viewpoints, and remaining impartial. Facilitators had backgrounds in health care but were not content experts in antibiotic overuse | |
Use of background materials | Participants received written materials about medical evidence, comparative effectiveness research, health care quality, and U.S. health care costs. Materials were designed to provide neutral and unbiased background information to inform deliberation | |
Discussion of case study about antibiotic overuse | Discussed during the first session in person and on the online discussion board. Discussed again at the beginning of the second session. Facilitators encouraged participants to weigh the medical evidence about antibiotic overuse with parent and physician autonomy to use antibiotics. Facilitators also prompted discussion about whether the societal harm that might result from antibiotic overuse should warrant rules that limit when antibiotics can be prescribed | Discussed on the first day of deliberation for less time than CD participants. Facilitators prompted discussion that focused on whether the societal harm that might result from antibiotic overuse should warrant rules that limit when antibiotics can be prescribed |
Use of content experts for antibiotic‐related discussion | In the week between the face‐to‐face sessions, participants communicated with two content experts via an online discussion board about antibiotic overuse. Experts presented different sides of the antibiotic overuse issue and answered participant questions | CP participants did not discuss the antibiotic case study with content experts |
Other case studies/topics discussed during deliberation that are not included in this analysis a | Hospital quality at high and low volume facilities | Hospital quality at high and low volume facilities, obesity treatment and prevention, heart disease treatment, prevention of a fictional illness |
aThese additional case studies were designed to help participants grapple with the complex overarching question posed in the larger study. Additional details about these case studies are available elsewhere.31