| Literature DB >> 28367068 |
Ellie Lee1, Robbie M Sutton2, Bonny L Hartley3.
Abstract
In this article, we follow the approach taken by Riesch and Spiegalhalter in "Careless pork costs lives': Risk stories from science to press release to media' published in this journal, and offer an assessment of one example of a 'risk story'. Using content and thematic qualitative analysis, we consider how the findings of an article 'Fetal Alcohol Exposure and IQ at Age 8: Evidence from a Population-Based Birth-Cohort Study' were framed in the article itself, the associated press release, and the subsequent extensive media coverage. We contextualise this consideration of a risk story by discussing a body of work that critically engages with the development and global proliferation of efforts to advocate for alcohol abstinence to pregnant (and pre-pregnant) women. This work considers the 'democratisation' of risk, a term used to draw attention to the expansion of the definition of the problem of drinking in pregnancy to include any drinking and all women. We show here how this risk story contributed a new dimension to the democratisation of risk through claims that were made about uncertainty and certainty. A central argument we make concerns the contribution of the researchers themselves (not just lobby groups or journalists) to this outcome. We conclude that the democratisation of risk was advanced in this case not simply through journalists exaggerating and misrepresenting research findings, but that communication to the press and the initial interpretation of findings played their part. We suggest that this risk story raises concerns about the accuracy of reporting of research findings, and about the communication of unwarrantedly worrying messages to pregnant women about drinking alcohol.Entities:
Keywords: IQ; alcohol; democratisation; pregnancy; risk; uncertainty
Year: 2016 PMID: 28367068 PMCID: PMC5351785 DOI: 10.1080/13698575.2016.1229758
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Risk Soc ISSN: 1369-8575
Occurrence of themes in documents.
| | Lewis et al.’s ( | Press release | Science Media Centre | Media coverage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Theme code and description | ||||
| 1/0 | 0/0 | 1/0 | 7/14 | |
| 0 | 1 | 1 | 53 | |
| 0 | 1 | 6 | 47 | |
| 1 | 1 | 4 | 55 | |
| 1 | 0 | 1 | 5 | |
| 1 | 0 | 6 | 24 | |
| 1 | 1 | 1 | 30 | |
*The figure to the left of the slash in each cell refers to correct descriptions of the observed positive correlation between drinking during pregnancy and children’s IQ. The figure to the right of the slash refers to incorrect descriptions of this relationship (i.e., statements that it was negative).
| News (UK and international print/online versions of print) |
|---|
| Guardian ‘IQ research prompts warning over drinking alcohol during pregnancy’ |
| The Daily Telegraph (London) ‘Alcohol in pregnancy can take six points off child’s IQ, claims study’ |
| The Independent ‘Even moderate drinking during pregnancy can affect child’s IQ’ |
| The Times (London) ‘Warning tiny amount of alcohol during pregnancy can harm a child’s IQ’ |
| The Sun (England) ‘Any wine and kid’s a plonker; MUMS WARNED’ |
| Daily Mail (online) ‘Just one glass of wine a week while pregnant “can harm a baby’s IQ” ’ |
| Huffington Post Women, UK ‘Mums-To-Be Advised To Avoid All Alcohol’ |
| Huffington Post Parents ‘Light drinking while pregnant could lower baby’s IQ’ |
| Metro ‘Drinking small glass of wine while pregnant “could reduce child’s IQ”’ |
| Scotsman ‘Drinking one small glass of wine a week can lower child’s IQ, mothers-to-be warned’ |
| Belfast Telegraph Online ‘Avoid alcohol, mums-to-be warned’ |
| Irish Examiner ‘Mothers-to-be risk child’s IQ with glass of wine a week’ |
| Irish Times ‘Alcohol In Pregnancy “Could damage IQ”’ |
| Independent.ie ‘“Mums to be” warned just one glass of wine a week can reduce their child’s IQ’ |
| Bristol Post ‘Mums warned of booze threat to babies’ IQ; Drinking while pregnant could harm children’ |
| Western Mail ‘Pregnant women advised to avoid all alcohol’ |
| Bath Chronicle ‘New alcohol warning to mothers … drop of wine can still harm your baby’ |
| Western Daily Press ‘Sip can damage unborn babies; New alcohol warning to mothers Drop of wine can still harm baby, pregnant mums told’ |
| Chicago Tribune ‘Even moderate drinking in pregnancy may affect child’s IQ’ |
| Los Angeles Times ‘Moderate alcohol intake during pregnancy may not be OK after all’ |
| Herald Sun ‘One or two glasses of wine a week enough to harm unborn child: study’ |
| Daily Mail (online India) ‘Drinking even small amounts of alcohol while pregnant “can affect child’s IQ”’ |
| India (Mail) Today ‘Alcohol consumed during pregnancy can affect child’s IQ: Study’ |
| BBC News online ‘Moderate drinking in pregnancy “harms IQ”’ |
| BBC Newsbeat ‘Your view: Mums say they didn’t drink during pregnancy’ |
| Channel 4 News ‘Drinking in pregnancy “harms baby’s IQ”’ |
| Sky News ‘Alcohol In Pregnancy “Can Lower Child’s IQ”’ |
| CBS News ‘Moderate drinking during pregnancy may lower child’s IQ’ |
| Fox News ‘Light drinking while pregnant could lower baby’s IQ’ |
| RTT News ‘Avoid Alcohol When Pregnant And Here’s Why: Study’ |
| Active quote ‘Drinking just one glass of wine a week during pregnancy could lower child IQ’ |
| Direct 2 Mum ‘Moderate Drinking Will Damage Your Baby’s IQ’ |
| Health Canal ‘Moderate drinking in pregnancy can affect child’s IQ’ |
| Health Canal ‘RCOG statement on new research suggesting moderate alcohol consumption during pregnancy has an effect on children’s IQ’ |
| Healthcare Today UK ‘Drinking in pregnancy can impact on IQ’ |
| On Medica ‘Drinking during pregnancy affects child’s intelligence’ |
| The Drinks Business ‘Drinking when pregnant harms IQ’ |
| Thejournal.ie ‘Study shows even moderate drinking in pregnancy can affect child’s IQ’ |
| News.com.au ‘Two wines’ harm unborn child’ |
| Counsel & Heal ‘Drinking During Pregnancy Lowers Child’s IQ’ |
| Insider Medicine ‘Moderate drinking during pregnancy affects child’s IQ’ |
| Made for Mums ‘New study reinforces advice to avoid alcohol in pregnancy’ |
| Medical Daily ‘Even Moderate Drinking During Pregnancy Lowers Child’s IQ’ |
| Medical News Today ‘Even Moderate Drinking While Pregnant Can Hurt Child’s IQ’ |
| Net Doctor ‘Moderate drinking in pregnancy “may affect IQ”’ |
| Top News US ‘Expecting Mothers Should Avoid Drinking: Study’ |
| US News ‘Moderate Drinking in Pregnancy Tied to Lower IQ in Child’ |
| WebMD ‘Latest research on pregnancy and alcohol’ |
| JournalWatch ‘Moderate Alcohol Consumption in Pregnancy Linked to Lower Childhood IQ, Genotypying Study Suggests’ |
| IOL Lifestyle ‘Drinking while pregnant can affect baby’s IQ’ |
| Reuters ‘Even moderate drinking in pregnancy may affect child’s IQ’ |
| Yahoo News ‘Light Drinking While Pregnant Could Lower Baby’s IQ’ |
| Live Science ‘Light Drinking While Pregnant Could Lower Baby’s IQ’ |
| News.com.au ‘Kids’ IQs affected by small alcohol intake’ |
| Wellcome Trust ‘Moderate drinking in pregnancy can affect a child’s IQ’1 |
| New Scientist ‘Moderate drink during pregnancy can lower baby’s IQ’ |
| Nursing Times ‘Warning over moderate drinking during pregnancy’ |
| NCADD ‘Moderate Levels of Drinking in Pregnancy Linked With Lower IQ in Children’ |
| RCOG statement ‘RCOG statement on new research suggesting moderate alcohol consumption during pregnancy has an effect on children’s IQ’ |
| BishopBlog ‘Moderate drinking in pregnancy: toxic or benign?’ |
| Skeptical Scalpel ‘Skeptical Scalpel: Moderate maternal alcohol use lowers children’s IQ (not)’ |
| Carl Heneghan ‘Should I drink moderately during pregnancy?’ |
| Understanding Uncertainty (David Spiegelhalter) ‘Alcohol in pregnancy and IQ of children’ |
| NHS Choices ‘Weekly glass of wine in pregnancy “harms kids’ IQ”’2 |
| MailOnline ‘What’s worse for a baby … a sip of Pinot Grigio or a guilt-ridden mum?’3 |
1Is identical to the press release.
2Also falls under the category of ‘NGO/Government body/specialist press’.
3Also falls under the category of ‘News (UK and international print /online versions of print)’.
RCOG: Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists; NCADD: National Council on Alcohol & Drug Dependence.
| | Media coverage | Science Media Centre | Press release | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Theme code and description | ||||
| Says_IQ_higher_if_drink: States that empirically, children of mothers who drink have higher IQs | 7 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Says_IQ_lower_if_drink: States that empirically, children of mothers who drink have lower IQs | 14 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Says_alc_harmful: States that there is a causal, deleterious link between drinking and IQ (separately from whether or how it describes the actual findings) | 56 | 3 | 1 | 1 |
| Says_causal_link_not_proven: States that the study does not demonstrate a causal link | 5 | 3 | 0 | 1 |
| If_alc_harmful_definite: | 53 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| If_alc_harmful_maybe: | 37 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
| Warning: Contains a warning or advice not to drink | 47 | 6 | 1 | 0 |
| If_warning_precautionary: | 17 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
| If_warning_findings: | 40 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Gene_effect_moderated: Mentions the role of genes | 55 | 4 | 1 | 1 |
| Mentions-SES: Mentions the role of SES | 5 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| If_SES_poshmumsdrink: | 5 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| If_SES_confound: | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| If_SES_vague_wrong: | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Methodological_critique: Contains methodological critique of the article | 8 | 4 | 0 | 1 |
| Effect size small?: Mentions that the effect sizes observed are small | 16 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Effect size large?: Mentions that the effect sizes observed are large | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Positioning_trumps previous research/eliminates confusion and uncertainty?: Claims that the present findings eliminate or resolve previous contradiction and uncertainty in research | 30 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Positioning_present findings should be interpreted/weighed with caution given other results: Claims that the present findings should be taken with a pinch of salt or not weighed too heavily given that other studies have shown no (or beneficial) effects | 5 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Claim that method rules out lifestyle and socio-economic effects: Claims that the method eliminates influence of other factors … similar to trumping previous research but doesn’t require story to refer to other research, just takes current study alone | 29 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
Note: 1This includes the SMC summary and 11 expert commentaries.