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If I'm better than average, then I'm ok?: Comparative information influences beliefs about risk and benefits
[摘要] Objective: To test whether providing comparative risk information changes risk perceptions. Methods: Two hundred and forty-nine female visitors to a hospital cafeteria were randomized to one of two conditions which differed in whether their hypothetical breast cancer risks was lower or higher than the average women's. Participants read a scenario describing a breast cancer prevention pill and indicated their: (1) likelihood of taking the pill and (2) perception of whether the pill provides breast cancer risk reduction. Results: Women told that their hypothetical risk of breast cancer was above average were more likely to endorse taking the pill (2.79 vs. 2.23, F 4.95, p = 0.002) and more likely to believe that the pill provided a significant risk reduction in breast cancer (3.15 vs. 2.73, F = 4.32, p 0.005), even though the risks were equivalent. Conclusions: Providing people with comparative risk information changes their risk perceptions. People who have above average risk may feel compelled to take a treatment because they are at above average risk and therefore may not thoroughly consider the trade-offs in the risks and benefits of treatment. Practice implications: Physicians and decision aid developers must reconsider the practice of communicating average risk information to patients. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd.
[发布日期] 2007-12-01 [发布机构] 
[效力级别]  [学科分类] 
[关键词] breast cancer;risk communication;decision making;comparative risk [时效性] 
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