Numeric, Verbal, and Visual Formats of Conveying Health Risks: Suggested Best Practices and Future Recommendations
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 September 2007
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by SAGE Publications in Medical Decision Making
- Vol. 27 (5), 696-713
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0272989x07307271
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 (i.e., 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 (e.g., 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.Keywords
This publication has 133 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mortality versus survival graphs: Improving temporal consistency in perceptions of treatment effectivenessPatient Education and Counseling, 2007
- Accuracy and impact of risk assessment in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease: a systematic reviewHeart, 2006
- Design Features of Graphs in Health Risk Communication: A Systematic ReviewJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2006
- Foreground:background salience: Explaining the effects of graphical displays on risk avoidanceOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 2003
- Low penetrance genes associated with increased risk for breast cancerEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 2000
- The Effect of Catastrophe Potential on the Interpretation of Numerical Probabilities of the Occurrence of Hazards1Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1997
- Risk Communication: Absolute versus Relative Expressions of Low-Probability RisksOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1994
- Selection of verbal probabilities: A solution for some problems of verbal probability expressionOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1991
- Information displays and preference reversalsOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1988
- Judgments of Circle Sizes on Statistical MapsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1982