Communicating about risk: strategies for situations where public concern is high but the risk is low
In this article, we summarise research that identifies best practice for communicating about hazards where the risk is low but public concern is high. We apply Peter Sandman’s ‘risk = hazard + outrage’ formulation to these risks, and review factors associated with the amplification of risk signals....
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doaj-8b0998a0a9b1440d95d1aab706a136eb2020-11-25T02:23:56ZengSax InstitutePublic Health Research & Practice2204-20912017-02-0127110.17061/phrp2711709 Communicating about risk: strategies for situations where public concern is high but the risk is lowClaire Hooker 0Adam Capon1Julie Leask2Centre for Values, Ethics and Law in Medicine, University of Sydney, NSW, AustraliaEnvironmental Health Branch, Health Protection NSW, Sydney, AustraliaSchool of Public Health, Sydney Medical School and Sydney Nursing School, University of Sydney, NSW, AustraliaIn this article, we summarise research that identifies best practice for communicating about hazards where the risk is low but public concern is high. We apply Peter Sandman’s ‘risk = hazard + outrage’ formulation to these risks, and review factors associated with the amplification of risk signals. We discuss the structures that determine the success of risk communication strategies, such as the capacity for early communication to ‘capture’ the dominant representation of risk issues, the importance of communicating uncertainty, and the usefulness of engaging with communities. We argue that, when facing trade-offs in probable outcomes from communication, it is always best to choose strategies that maintain or build trust, even at the cost of initial overreactions. We discuss these features of successful risk communication in relation to a range of specific examples, particularly opposition to community water fluoridation, Ebola, and routine childhood immunisation.http://www.phrp.com.au/issues/february-2017-volume-27-issue-1-2/communicating-about-risk-strategies-for-situations-where-public-concern-is-high-but-the-risk-is-low/consumer and community participationhealth promotion |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Claire Hooker Adam Capon Julie Leask |
spellingShingle |
Claire Hooker Adam Capon Julie Leask Communicating about risk: strategies for situations where public concern is high but the risk is low Public Health Research & Practice consumer and community participation health promotion |
author_facet |
Claire Hooker Adam Capon Julie Leask |
author_sort |
Claire Hooker |
title |
Communicating about risk: strategies for situations where public concern is high but the risk is low |
title_short |
Communicating about risk: strategies for situations where public concern is high but the risk is low |
title_full |
Communicating about risk: strategies for situations where public concern is high but the risk is low |
title_fullStr |
Communicating about risk: strategies for situations where public concern is high but the risk is low |
title_full_unstemmed |
Communicating about risk: strategies for situations where public concern is high but the risk is low |
title_sort |
communicating about risk: strategies for situations where public concern is high but the risk is low |
publisher |
Sax Institute |
series |
Public Health Research & Practice |
issn |
2204-2091 |
publishDate |
2017-02-01 |
description |
In this article, we summarise research that identifies best practice for communicating about hazards where the risk is low but public concern is high. We apply Peter Sandman’s ‘risk = hazard + outrage’ formulation to these risks, and review factors associated with the amplification of risk signals. We discuss the structures that determine the success of risk communication strategies, such as the capacity for early communication to ‘capture’ the dominant representation of risk issues, the importance of communicating uncertainty, and the usefulness of engaging with communities.
We argue that, when facing trade-offs in probable outcomes from communication, it is always best to choose strategies that maintain or build trust, even at the cost of initial overreactions. We discuss these features of successful risk communication in relation to a range of specific examples, particularly opposition to community water fluoridation, Ebola, and routine childhood immunisation. |
topic |
consumer and community participation health promotion |
url |
http://www.phrp.com.au/issues/february-2017-volume-27-issue-1-2/communicating-about-risk-strategies-for-situations-where-public-concern-is-high-but-the-risk-is-low/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
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