Objectives <p>To evaluate the participatory recruitment and engagement processes used in the implementation of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Patient-Reported Indicator Surveys (PaRIS) Project in Saskatchewan, Canada, and to identify lessons to inform future primary care data initiatives.</p> Design <p>Participatory evaluation using a qualitative, interpretive descriptive approach, guided by a participatory evaluation framework grounded in relational equity.</p> Setting <p>Ten purposively selected primary care clinics across Saskatchewan, including academic family medicine units, community health centres, a nurse practitioner–led clinic, and a northern group physician practice, representing urban, rural, remote, and Indigenous-serving areas in the province.</p> Participants <p>Primary care practitioners (family physicians and nurse practitioners), clinic administrators and medical office assistants, and people with lived experience who were involved in PaRIS survey implementation and interpretation of clinic-level dashboards.</p> Intervention <p>Clinic-level engagement with OECD PaRIS dashboards presenting aggregated patient-reported experience measures (PREMs) and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), supported through relational, trust-based engagement, feedback sessions, and participatory interpretation.</p> Primary and secondary outcome measures <p>Perceived effectiveness of recruitment and engagement strategies; experiences of dashboard interpretation and use; identified facilitators, challenges, and opportunities for improvement in participatory primary care data initiatives.</p> Results <p>Early, trust-based engagement fostered strong clinic participation, a sense of co-ownership of data, and increased willingness to use findings for reflection and quality improvement. Participants described the dashboards as validating and empowering, particularly when supported by contextualized narratives. Key facilitators included relational transparency, clinic-specific feedback, and iterative feedback loops. Challenges included visual complexity of dashboards, limited access to comparative data due to embargoes, time constraints for team-based reflection, and reduced accessibility for some digitally underserved patient groups. Participants identified opportunities to simplify data visualizations, tailor dissemination formats, and extend engagement timelines, particularly when working with Indigenous communities.</p> Conclusions <p>Relationship-driven, participatory approaches can meaningfully enhance engagement with PREMs and PROMs in primary care. Embedding relational equity throughout recruitment, data interpretation, and feedback processes supports co-ownership of data and strengthens its relevance for local quality improvement. Our findings offer practical guidance for designing inclusive, culturally responsive primary care data initiatives.</p>

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Evaluating the participatory processes within the OECD PaRIS project in Saskatchewan: lessons learned about recruitment and engagement

  • Udoka Okpalauwaekwe,
  • Rachel Vanneste,
  • Brenda Andreas,
  • Mark Lees,
  • Dawn Martin,
  • Lisa Clatney,
  • Paul Lendzyk,
  • Aubrey Tollefson,
  • Jennifer Kuzmicz,
  • Kristin Foy,
  • Nazeem Muhajarine,
  • Vivian R. Ramsden,
  • Reem Abdul Hadi,
  • Bonnie Ast,
  • Mahshid Bagheri,
  • Shannon Bandura,
  • Angela Baerwald,
  • Michael Bayda,
  • Candina Beaurivage,
  • Doug Bell,
  • Colleen Brockbank,
  • Kristin Canart,
  • Claire Chao Danielle Chartier,
  • Darren Chew,
  • Megan Clark,
  • Jeannie Coe,
  • Cathy Cole,
  • Holly Anne Cook-Laliberte,
  • Ettiene Crouse,
  • Starr Davis,
  • Christine Dawson,
  • Armaan Dogra,
  • John Dosman,
  • Nicole Dubois,
  • Kris Dutchak,
  • Cara Fallis,
  • Jill Farrukh,
  • Eleanor Francis,
  • Danielle Frost,
  • Joanna Fynn,
  • Hillary Gable,
  • Asma Gargoum,
  • Kali Gartner,
  • Rachel Gough,
  • Kevin Govender,
  • Seema Goyal,
  • Brendan Groat,
  • Twila Grona,
  • Sean Groves,
  • Tracey Guselle,
  • Joan Hamilton,
  • Jacelyn Hanson,
  • Jessica Harris,
  • Boris Hencic,
  • Martin Heroux,
  • Alyx Holden,
  • Caylee Holden,
  • Carla Holinaty,
  • Jason Hosain,
  • Somto Ibezi,
  • Hazel Javier,
  • Rachel Johnson,
  • Sylvie Jones,
  • Rejina Kamrul,
  • Ross Kerhoff,
  • Matt Kushneriuk,
  • Leung Kwok,
  • Angela Lapetsky,
  • Dag Lawale,
  • Kathy Lawrence,
  • Kevin Ledding,
  • Crystal Litwin,
  • Faith Lubansa,
  • Cathy MacLean,
  • Della Magnusson,
  • Loreanne Manalac,
  • Morris Markentin,
  • Razawa Maroof,
  • Radhika Marwah,
  • Darcie McGonigle,
  • Reid McGonigle,
  • Meredith McKague,
  • Robin McMaster,
  • Andries Muller,
  • Michael Nicholls,
  • Solveig Nilson,
  • Buchi Nwodo,
  • Cindy Nylund,
  • Meric Osman,
  • Paula Paley,
  • Cassandra Pancyr,
  • Leane Pask,
  • Jodi Parent,
  • Payton Pederson,
  • Rae Petrucha,
  • Aaron Prystupa,
  • Olivia Reis,
  • Volker Rininsland,
  • Jessica Rivas,
  • Angela Robinson,
  • Clara Rocha Michaels,
  • Erika Roets,
  • Wessel Roets,
  • Bethany Rolfe,
  • Ginger Ruddy,
  • Isa Saidu,
  • Easan Sasithary,
  • Marty Salter,
  • Herman Schalk van der Merwe,
  • Crystal Semple,
  • Erin Selzer,
  • Tharshan Selestin,
  • Nicole Shedden,
  • Lesley Shoemaker,
  • Mark Tarry,
  • Beavan Talukdar,
  • Arvinder Theathi,
  • Gillian Treen,
  • Aaron Vanderlot,
  • Andrea Vasquez Camargo,
  • Felecia Watson,
  • Yan Wu,
  • Cheryl Zagozeski,
  • Sinisa Zerajic

摘要

Objectives

To evaluate the participatory recruitment and engagement processes used in the implementation of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Patient-Reported Indicator Surveys (PaRIS) Project in Saskatchewan, Canada, and to identify lessons to inform future primary care data initiatives.

Design

Participatory evaluation using a qualitative, interpretive descriptive approach, guided by a participatory evaluation framework grounded in relational equity.

Setting

Ten purposively selected primary care clinics across Saskatchewan, including academic family medicine units, community health centres, a nurse practitioner–led clinic, and a northern group physician practice, representing urban, rural, remote, and Indigenous-serving areas in the province.

Participants

Primary care practitioners (family physicians and nurse practitioners), clinic administrators and medical office assistants, and people with lived experience who were involved in PaRIS survey implementation and interpretation of clinic-level dashboards.

Intervention

Clinic-level engagement with OECD PaRIS dashboards presenting aggregated patient-reported experience measures (PREMs) and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), supported through relational, trust-based engagement, feedback sessions, and participatory interpretation.

Primary and secondary outcome measures

Perceived effectiveness of recruitment and engagement strategies; experiences of dashboard interpretation and use; identified facilitators, challenges, and opportunities for improvement in participatory primary care data initiatives.

Results

Early, trust-based engagement fostered strong clinic participation, a sense of co-ownership of data, and increased willingness to use findings for reflection and quality improvement. Participants described the dashboards as validating and empowering, particularly when supported by contextualized narratives. Key facilitators included relational transparency, clinic-specific feedback, and iterative feedback loops. Challenges included visual complexity of dashboards, limited access to comparative data due to embargoes, time constraints for team-based reflection, and reduced accessibility for some digitally underserved patient groups. Participants identified opportunities to simplify data visualizations, tailor dissemination formats, and extend engagement timelines, particularly when working with Indigenous communities.

Conclusions

Relationship-driven, participatory approaches can meaningfully enhance engagement with PREMs and PROMs in primary care. Embedding relational equity throughout recruitment, data interpretation, and feedback processes supports co-ownership of data and strengthens its relevance for local quality improvement. Our findings offer practical guidance for designing inclusive, culturally responsive primary care data initiatives.