scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Numeric, Verbal, and Visual Formats of Conveying Health Risks: Suggested Best Practices and Future Recommendations

Isaac M. Lipkus
- 14 Sep 2007 - 
- Vol. 27, Iss: 5, pp 696-713
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Best practices for conveying magnitude of health risks using numeric, verbal, and visual formats are offered and several recommendations are suggested for enhancing precision in perception of risk by presenting risk magnitudes numerically and visually.
Abstract
Perception of health risk can affect medical decisions and health behavior change Yet the concept of risk is a difficult one for the public to grasp Whether perceptions of risk affect decisions and behaviors often relies on how messages of risk magnitudes (ie, likelihood) are conveyed Based on expert opinion, this article offers, when possible, best practices for conveying magnitude of health risks using numeric, verbal, and visual formats This expert opinion is based on existing empirical evidence, review of papers and books, and consultations with experts in risk communication This article also discusses formats to use pertaining to unique risk communication challenges (eg, conveying small-probability events, interactions) Several recommendations are suggested for enhancing precision in perception of risk by presenting risk magnitudes numerically and visually Overall, there are little data to suggest best practices for verbal communication of risk magnitudes Across the 3 formats, few overall recommendations could be suggested because of 1) lack of consistency in testing formats using the same outcomes in the domain of interest, 2) lack of critical tests using randomized controlled studies pitting formats against one another, and 3) lack of theoretical progress detailing and testing mechanisms why one format should be more efficacious in a specific context to affect risk magnitudes than others Areas of future research are provided that it is hoped will help illuminate future best practices

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

How does communication heal? Pathways linking clinician-patient communication to health outcomes.

TL;DR: Clinicians and patients should maximize the therapeutic effects of communication by explicitly orienting communication to achieve intermediate outcomes associated with improved health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Helping Doctors and Patients Make Sense of Health Statistics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the importance of teaching statistical thinking and transparent representations in primary and secondary education as well as in medical school, and recommend using frequency statements instead of single-event probabilities, absolute risks instead of relative risks, mortality rates instead of survival rates, and natural frequencies instead of conditional probabilities.

Health literacy interventions and outcomes: an updated systematic review.

TL;DR: Differences in health literacy level were consistently associated with increased hospitalizations, greater emergency care use, lower use of mammography, lower receipt of influenza vaccine, poorer ability to demonstrate taking medications appropriately, poorer able to interpret labels and health messages, and, among seniors, poorer overall health status and higher mortality.

Helping doctors and patients make sense of health statistics: towards an evidence-based society

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that statistical illiteracy is common to patients, journalists, and physicians and that information pamphlets, Web sites, leaflets distributed by the pharmaceutical industry, and even medical journals often report evidence in nontransparent forms that suggest big benefits of featured interventions and small harms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Progress in evidence-based medicine: a quarter century on.

TL;DR: Evidence-based medicine progressed to recognise limitations of evidence alone, and has increasingly stressed the need to combine critical appraisal of the evidence with patient's values and preferences through shared decision making.
References
More filters
Book

Improving Statistical Reasoning: Theoretical Models and Practical Implications

TL;DR: This chapter discusses associationist models of Statistical Reasoning, the law of large numbers and Sample-Size Tasks, and Variations of Bayesian Inference.
Journal ArticleDOI

Describing Treatment Effects to Patients

TL;DR: Examining the impact of different presentations of equivalent information (framing) on treatment decisions faced by patients found that expressing the information in more than one way may present a balanced view to patients and enable them to make informed decisions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of numerical statements of risk on trust and comfort with hypothetical physician risk communication.

TL;DR: It is shown that including a numeric statement of risk in a risk communication can increase trust and belief in and comfort with the risk information.

Diagrammatic representation and reasoning

Zenon Kulpa
TL;DR: The rapidly developing field of diagrammatic knowledge representation and reasoning is surveyed and the origins and rationale of the field, basic principles and methodologies, as well as selected applications are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Provision of information about drug side-effects to patients

TL;DR: Until further work is done on how patients taking the drugs interpret these terms, the terms should not be used in drug information leaflets.
Related Papers (5)