Find key resources
Citizens make many decisions each and every day. Some are personal decisions for themselves or their families, while others are decisions related to their community, their country, or the world. In many instances, evidence-based resources are available to help. Here we highlight resources in four key solution areas to help citizens use evidence in everyday life.
Focus of curated resources
- Making evidence-based choices the default or easy option
- Making evidence available to citizens when they are making general choices
- Helping citizens judge what others are claiming or more generally find (and receive) reliable information on a topic
- Engaging citizens in asking questions and answering them (with new research or with existing evidence)
This curated list of resources is currently in development. We will make resources available as we identify them. We select resources based on the following criteria:
- The resource is relevant to one of the following general areas:
- Helping citizens judge what others are claiming or more generally find (and receive) reliable information on a topic
- Making evidence available to citizens when they are making general choices
- Engaging citizens in asking questions and answering them (with new research or with existing evidence)
- Making evidence-based choices the default or easy option
- The date of the resource is less than 5 years old
- The resource is reliable and based on research evidence
- The resource is not directly funded by a company trying to sell someone a product or service
- The resource is intended for citizens
- The resource is free of access
- The resource is available in English
If you know of a resource that would be helpful to citizens in any of the following categories and satisfying the above criteria, then please reach out to us at evidencecommission@mcmaster.ca.
Helping citizens judge what others are claiming, or more generally find (and receive) reliable information on a topic
Examples | Types of decisions | Resources |
Tools and training for citizens to develop their critical-thinking skills | Many types of decisions | That’s a Claim provides tools to help citizens assess the trustworthiness of claims made in 14 sectors, including agriculture, economics, education, environmental, health and more |
Short documents summarizing the best evidence on different topics using everyday language | Managing my health, safety and well-being (and that of my family's) | Plain-language summaries produced by the Cochrane Collaboration |
Plain-language summaries produced by the Campbell Collaboration | ||
Strategies that journalists and science communicators can use to counter misinformation | Managing my health, safety and well-being (and that of my family's) | World Health Organization created a ‘myth buster’ series about various topics related to the COVID-19 pandemic |
Covid-19 Misinfo | ||
iHealthFacts enables the public to quickly and easily check the reliability of a health claim | ||
Many types of decisions | brings together independent fact-checking organizations to discuss and define the standards of independence, transparency and methodological and journalistic quality that must guide efforts to combat disinformation | |
fact check claims made by politicians, public institutions and journalists, as well as viral content online | ||
Building a culture where evidence is understood, valued and used |
Making evidence available to citizens when they are making general choices
Examples | Types of decisions | Resources |
Trustworthy websites featuring evidence about a wide range of choices | Spending my money on products and services | Wirecutter for shopping products |
Volunteering my time and donating money | 80,000 hours for finding high-impact careers or high-impact volunteering opportunities | |
GiveWell for giving to the charities that make the most of every dollar they receive | ||
Decision aids that explain what evidence is available about different options alongside the pros and cons of each option | Managing my health, safety and well-being (and that of my family's) |
Engaging citizens in asking questions and answering them (with new research or with existing evidence)
Examples | Types of decisions | Resources |
Creating a website where citizens can submit their questions to organizations funding research | ||
Having citizens engaged in prioritizing questions from all of those received | ||
Encouraging citizens to become partners in a research team to answer the question | ||
Encouraging citizens to become partners in teams that are dedicated to summarize existing evidence on the question |
Making evidence-based choices the default or easy option
Examples | Types of decisions | Resources |
Adopting laws to ensure that policies, programs, services and products presented to citizens are based on the best available evidence | ||
Providing rewards or penalties to businesses advertising products depending on whether the products are supported by the available evidence | ||
Supporting big tech companies to ensure that information and products presented to citizens is evidence based | ||
Using “nudge” strategies to steer citizens towards evidence-based choices, but still allowing them to go look at other choices too |
Helpful links
- Update 2023 (p.10-11)
- Watch our webinar series
- Find key resources to put evidence at the centre of everyday life
- Read the citizen brief
- Read insights from a group of citizens
- Read our FAQs on evidence in everyday life
Key concepts from Update 2023 relevant to this priority
- 3.0 Context for and challenges with putting evidence at the centre for everyday life PPT
- 3.1 These are early days in understanding ‘what works’ in putting evidence at the centre for everyday life PPT
Key sections from our report relevant for engaging citizens
- 3.6 - Citizens and the context for their use of evidence
- 4.9 - Contexts that shape how evidence is viewed
- 4.10 - Indigenous rights and ways of knowing
- 4.11 - Misinformation and infodemics
- 5.3 - Strategies used by evidence intermediaries
Other key sections that offer context: