| Literature DB >> 26709206 |
Delesha M Carpenter1, Lorie L Geryk1, Annie T Chen2, Rebekah H Nagler3, Nathan F Dieckmann4, Paul K J Han5,6.
Abstract
Conflicting health information is increasing in amount and visibility, as evidenced most recently by the controversy surrounding the risks and benefits of childhood vaccinations. The mechanisms through which conflicting information affects individuals are poorly understood; thus, we are unprepared to help people process conflicting information when making important health decisions. In this viewpoint article, we describe this problem, summarize insights from the existing literature on the prevalence and effects of conflicting health information, and identify important knowledge gaps. We propose a working definition of conflicting health information and describe a conceptual typology to guide future research in this area. The typology classifies conflicting information according to four fundamental dimensions: the substantive issue under conflict, the number of conflicting sources (multiplicity), the degree of evidence heterogeneity and the degree of temporal inconsistency.Entities:
Keywords: conflicting information; decision-making; health
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26709206 PMCID: PMC5139056 DOI: 10.1111/hex.12438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Expect ISSN: 1369-6513 Impact factor: 3.377
Conflicting health information typology applied to measles–mumps–rubella (MMR) vaccinations
| Dimension | Definition | Case | Examples of Conflicting Information for the Specific Proposition: ‘I should get my child vaccinated’ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Issue of conflict | The specific health topic (e.g. diagnosis, prognosis, cause, treatment) for which conflicting information exists | Vaccine schedule vs. vaccine risk | – |
| Multiplicity | The number of sources that provides conflicting information about a health issue | ||
|
| An Amazon discussion forum includes conflicting information threads. |
Amazon discussion forum: | |
|
| A government agency and a physician make different recommendations about the MMR vaccination. |
Recommendations of the ACIP: | |
| Evidence heterogeneity | The extent to which the conflicting information comes from similar or differing evidentiary types | ||
|
| Two journal articles report different findings about the link between MMR vaccinations and autism. |
The Lancet (1998): | |
|
| Conflicting vaccination information from a tabloid publication and a journal article |
Daily Mail (tabloid publication) (2006) | |
| Temporal inconsistency | Whether conflicting propositions about an issue exist at the same point in time or at different points in time | ||
|
| Current divergence in the existing clinical practice guidelines on the vaccination schedule issued by the ACIP and NACI |
Recommendations of the ACIP: | |
|
| The 1989 ACIP statement compared to the 1987 ACIP statements |
29 December 1989: |
MMR, measles–mumps–rubella; ACIP, Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices; NACI, National Advisory committee on Immunization; GACVS, Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety.
Amazon discussion forum. MMR vaccine DOES NOT cause autism!!!. July 2010. Available at: http://www.amazon.com/forum/parenting?_encoding=UTF8&cdForum=Fx20C498EK5JY4S&cdThread=Tx9PZWGZL9NYYJ, accessed 10 February 2015.
Drtenpenny.com. When Parents Question Vaccination [Blog post]. 2013 [cited 2015]. Available at: http://drtenpenny.com/when-parents-question-vaccination/.