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Use of a modified Delphi approach to develop research priorities for the Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland.

Use of a modified Delphi approach to develop research priorities for the Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland.
Use of a modified Delphi approach to develop research priorities for the Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland.
AIM:The modified Delphi approach is an established method for reaching a consensus opinion among a group of experts in a particular field. We have used this technique to survey the entire membership of the Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland (ACPGBI) to reach a consensus on prioritizing clinical research questions in colorectal disease.

METHOD:Three rounds of surveys were conducted using a web-based tool. In the first, the ACPGBI membership was invited to submit research questions. In Rounds 2 and 3 they were asked to score questions on priority. A steering group analysed the results of each round to identify those questions ranked as being of highest priority.

RESULTS:Five hundred and two questions were submitted in Round 1. Following two rounds of voting and analysis, a list of 25 priority questions was produced, including 15 cancer-related and 10 noncancer-related questions.

CONCLUSION:It is anticipated that these results will: (i) set the research agenda over the next few years for the study of colorectal disease in the United Kingdom, (ii) promote development and (iii) define funding of new research and prioritize areas of unmet clinical need where the potential clinical impact is greatest.
Delphi, ACPGBI, colorectal research priorities
965-970
Tiernan, J.
8518af49-b206-4f06-84c4-dc0d4f847684
Cook, A.
ab9c7bb3-974a-4db9-b3c2-9942988005d5
Geh, I.
75380ae8-35c1-4285-bb4f-5d7f9069973a
George, B.
ce4f6d28-7bab-43bd-99e7-acb007bf70ec
Magill, L.
fa23d00f-5e45-434b-bdd9-b779aaf6cbb8
Northover, J.
5c9277b2-20b1-4bad-8043-d60c78567960
Verjee, A.
efd93989-8f72-4e98-adab-406847647fa7
Wheeler, J.
fe2ac38d-e290-4c39-879d-eb9e3b3079b1
Fearnhead, N.
0f91349d-4c90-46df-bd59-e79decba6642
Tiernan, J.
8518af49-b206-4f06-84c4-dc0d4f847684
Cook, A.
ab9c7bb3-974a-4db9-b3c2-9942988005d5
Geh, I.
75380ae8-35c1-4285-bb4f-5d7f9069973a
George, B.
ce4f6d28-7bab-43bd-99e7-acb007bf70ec
Magill, L.
fa23d00f-5e45-434b-bdd9-b779aaf6cbb8
Northover, J.
5c9277b2-20b1-4bad-8043-d60c78567960
Verjee, A.
efd93989-8f72-4e98-adab-406847647fa7
Wheeler, J.
fe2ac38d-e290-4c39-879d-eb9e3b3079b1
Fearnhead, N.
0f91349d-4c90-46df-bd59-e79decba6642

Tiernan, J., Cook, A., Geh, I., George, B., Magill, L., Northover, J., Verjee, A., Wheeler, J. and Fearnhead, N. (2014) Use of a modified Delphi approach to develop research priorities for the Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland. Colorectal Disease, 16 (12), 965-970. (doi:10.1111/codi.12790). (PMID:25284641)

Record type: Article

Abstract

AIM:The modified Delphi approach is an established method for reaching a consensus opinion among a group of experts in a particular field. We have used this technique to survey the entire membership of the Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland (ACPGBI) to reach a consensus on prioritizing clinical research questions in colorectal disease.

METHOD:Three rounds of surveys were conducted using a web-based tool. In the first, the ACPGBI membership was invited to submit research questions. In Rounds 2 and 3 they were asked to score questions on priority. A steering group analysed the results of each round to identify those questions ranked as being of highest priority.

RESULTS:Five hundred and two questions were submitted in Round 1. Following two rounds of voting and analysis, a list of 25 priority questions was produced, including 15 cancer-related and 10 noncancer-related questions.

CONCLUSION:It is anticipated that these results will: (i) set the research agenda over the next few years for the study of colorectal disease in the United Kingdom, (ii) promote development and (iii) define funding of new research and prioritize areas of unmet clinical need where the potential clinical impact is greatest.

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Published date: December 2014
Keywords: Delphi, ACPGBI, colorectal research priorities
Organisations: Faculty of Medicine

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Local EPrints ID: 372697
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/372697
PURE UUID: 5d4cfc93-2f2e-40d4-b957-7daddd0acacc
ORCID for A. Cook: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6680-439X

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Date deposited: 17 Dec 2014 15:36
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:25

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Contributors

Author: J. Tiernan
Author: A. Cook ORCID iD
Author: I. Geh
Author: B. George
Author: L. Magill
Author: J. Northover
Author: A. Verjee
Author: J. Wheeler
Author: N. Fearnhead

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