| Literature DB >> 34559256 |
Charlotte Beaudart1, Mickael Hiligsmann2, Nannan Li2, E Michael Lewiecki3, Stuart Silverman4.
Abstract
Two scoping reviews were conducted to review recommendations and guidelines for communication regarding general health risk, and to investigate communication strategies regarding risk of fracture. Healthcare professionals are invited to apply these recommendations to optimize a patient-centered approach to reducing risk of fracture.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34559256 PMCID: PMC8758611 DOI: 10.1007/s00198-021-06151-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Osteoporos Int ISSN: 0937-941X Impact factor: 4.507
Fig. 1Flowchart of studies selection for review on communication of risk in general (A) and communication of risk of fracture (B)
FDA overall recommendations for communication of risk [13]
| • Avoid solely verbal descriptions of uncertainty. Patients may interpret what “low” and “high” risks are differently |
| • Avoid fractions, decimals, and different denominators when presenting risks of multiple treatments. These are relatively difficult for cognitive processing |
| • If possible, describe the benefits and risks in absolute scales instead of relative terms, which better inform the actual benefits and risks |
| • If possible, use multiple formats simultaneously (e.g., verbal frequency, percent, and icon array/pictograph). Relative understanding of these formats varies from patient to patient. Moreover, one format may make the other formats easier to understand |
| • If possible, describe uncertainty in both positive and negative frames (e.g., 20% chance of adverse events or 80% chance of no adverse events) to avoid cognitive bias |
| • Pretest the communication format. Since patient populations vary, pre-testing the chosen format can improve the comprehension of the format by the study population of interest |
Fagerlin et al.’s [14] 10 recommendations for effective communication of risk
| • Use plain language to make written and verbal materials more understandable |
| • Present data using absolute risks |
| • Present information in pictographs if you are going to include graphs |
| • Present data using frequencies |
| • Use an incremental risk format to highlight how treatment changes risks from preexisting baseline levels |
| • Be aware that the order in which risks and benefits are presented can affect risk perceptions |
| • Consider using summary tables that include all of the risks and benefits for each treatment option |
| • Recognize that comparative risk information (e.g., what the average person’s risk is) is persuasive and not just informative |
| • Consider presenting only the information that is most critical to the patients’ decision making, even at the expense of completeness |
| • Repeatedly draw patients’ attention to the time interval over which a risk occurs |
Fig. 2Expression of risk of fracture using three methods of communication including icon array (Figure issued from Lewiecki et al. [81], used with permission)
Fig. 3Four risk depictions (Figure issued from Edmonds et al. [77], used with permission)