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Enhancing Citizen Engagement in Cancer Screening Through Deliberative Democracy
Abstract
Cancer screening is widely practiced and
participation is promoted by various social, technical, and commercial
drivers, but
there are growing concerns about the emerging
harms, risks, and costs of cancer screening. Deliberative democracy
methods
engage citizens in dialogue on substantial and
complex problems: especially when evidence and values are important and
people
need time to understand and consider the relevant
issues. Information derived from such deliberations can provide
important
guidance to cancer screening policies: citizens’
values are made explicit, revealing what really matters to people and
why.
Policy makers can see what informed, rather than
uninformed, citizens would decide on the provision of services and
information
on cancer screening. Caveats can be elicited to
guide changes to existing policies and practices. Policies that take
account
of citizens’ opinions through a deliberative
democracy process can be considered more legitimate, justifiable, and
feasible
than those that don’t.
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