An evaluation of stakeholder engagement in comparative effectiveness research: lessons learned from SWOG S1415CD.
Ari Bell-BrownKate WatabayashiKarma KreizenbeckScott D RamseyAasthaa BansalWilliam E BarlowGary H LymanDawn L HershmanAnne Marie MercurioBarbara Segarra-VazquezFlorence KurttilaJamie S MyersJohn D GolenskiJudy JohnsonRobert L ErwinGuneet WaliaJeffrey CrawfordSean D SullivanPublished in: Journal of comparative effectiveness research (2022)
Aim: Stakeholder engagement is central to comparative effectiveness research yet there are gaps in definitions of success. We used a framework developed by Lavallee et al. defining effective engagement criteria to evaluate stakeholder engagement during a pragmatic cluster-randomized trial. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were developed from the framework and completed to learn about members' experiences. Interviews were analyzed in a deductive approach for themes related to the effective engagement criteria. Results: Thirteen members participated and described: respect for ideas, time to achieve consensus, access to information and continuous feedback as areas of effective engagement. The primary criticism was lack of diversity. Discussion: Feedback was positive, particularly among themes of respect, trust and competence, and led to development of a list of best practices for engagement. The framework was successful for evaluating engagement. Conclusion: Standardized frameworks allow studies to formally evaluate their stakeholder engagement approach and develop best practices for future research.