Panel Survey Approach
Cross-source consensus on Panel Survey Approach from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
How it works
Comparisons
Background
Highlighted claims
- The panel survey is a structured method for asking guideline panellists to estimate how patients in the target population would value trade-offs between benefits, harms, and burdens. — Development of an educational video to support guideline panels in incorporating patient values and preferences into recommendation-making: qualitative one-on-one interviews and brainstorming meetings
- The panel survey approach was developed by a core team from the MAGIC Evidence Ecosystem Foundation in collaboration with BMJ Rapid Recommendations to structure the inference process about patient values. — Development of an educational video to support guideline panels in incorporating patient values and preferences into recommendation-making: qualitative one-on-one interviews and brainstorming meetings
- The panel survey is not intended to replace primary studies of patient values and preferences. — Development of an educational video to support guideline panels in incorporating patient values and preferences into recommendation-making: qualitative one-on-one interviews and brainstorming meetings
- All panellists may participate in the panel survey, including clinicians, content experts, methodologists, and patient or public partners. — Development of an educational video to support guideline panels in incorporating patient values and preferences into recommendation-making: qualitative one-on-one interviews and brainstorming meetings
- The panel survey presents the best available evidence and guides panels to systematically consider patient perspectives when patient-preference evidence is absent, limited, or inconsistent. — Development of an educational video to support guideline panels in incorporating patient values and preferences into recommendation-making: qualitative one-on-one interviews and brainstorming meetings