1 / 17

Risk Perception

Risk Perception. The fundamental dilemma of health risk communication. The risks that kill people and the risks that alarm people are completely different Covello y Sandman, 2001. Theory of humanist psychology. Maslow’s hierarchy of needs Physiological needs Safety needs

sebastien
Download Presentation

Risk Perception

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Risk Perception

  2. The fundamental dilemma of health risk communication • The risks that kill people and the risks that alarm people are completely different Covello y Sandman, 2001.

  3. Theory of humanist psychology Maslow’s hierarchy of needs • Physiological needs • Safety needs • Psychological needs • Self-esteem needs • Self-actualizationneeds

  4. Risk = Hazard + Outrage (values) Covello y Sandman, 2001.

  5. To understand Risk Perception, we must answer the following questions: • What kind of individuals is the public made up of? • What factors determine risk perceptions and attitudes? • How are risk perceptions and attitudes manifested? • What can be done to soften attitudes regarding the risk?

  6. Elements that influence the community’s • risk perception • How true is the risk? • What is the absolute risk? • Are you really at risk? • What is obtained in exchange for the risk? • Can you do anything about the risk?

  7. Acceptable Risks: Voluntary Under your control Clearly beneficial Fairly distributed Natural Statistical From a reliable source Familiar Those that affect adults Fischhoff, et al., 1981 Unacceptable risks: Involuntary Controlled by others Of little or no benefit Unfairly distributed Man-made Catastrophic From unknown sources Unfamiliar, exotic Those that affect children Characteristics of the hazard that have an influence on Risk Perception

  8. Source:Canadian Food Inspection Agency

  9. Voluntary Risk Involuntary Risk

  10. Outrage factors andRisk Perception • Comprehension • Uncertainty • Delayed effects • Effects on children • Effects on future generations • Dread

  11. Outrage factors andRisk Perception (Continued) • Trust • Attention of the mass media • Reversibility • Ethical and moral nature • Man-made versus natural origin Covello y Sandman, 2001.

  12. Risk assessment is influenced by the bias of the perception • Availability bias: Judging probability by how easily the events can be brought to mind • Anchor bias: Assessments influenced by the event • Optimistic bias: Belief that one is running a slighter risk than the population at large (“that’s not going to happen to me”)

  13. Source: Canadian Food Inspection Agency

  14. Dimensions of trust • Commitment • Competence • Care • Openness and honesty

  15. What determinesRisk Perception? • Individual level in Maslow’s hierarchy of needs • Individual and social values • Culture • Experiences

  16. What determinesRisk Perception?(Continued) • Level of education • Outrage factors • Who the person is and how he/she is affected • Level of control over the event

  17. Perception is reality

More Related