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Communicating for a Knowledge Society

Communicating for a Knowledge Society. Communicating Risk and Uncertainty. Anna McHardy Department of Mathematics. Kill or cure? Help to make sense of the Daily Mail’s ongoing effort to classify every inanimate object into those that cause cancer and those that prevent it. What is Risk?.

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Communicating for a Knowledge Society

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  1. Communicating for a Knowledge Society Communicating Risk and Uncertainty Anna McHardy Department of Mathematics

  2. Kill or cure? Help to make sense of the Daily Mail’s ongoing effort to classify every inanimate object into those that cause cancer and those that prevent it.

  3. What is Risk? Researchers describe risk as the estimated chance of getting a disease during a certain time period, such as within the next 10 years, or during your lifetime.

  4. Study: Example 1

  5. Why do doctors prescribe aspirin to heart attack victims? In 1988 the results of the Physicians’ Health Study Research Group study were reported in the New England Journal of Medicine.

  6. The reference class matters • From which group was the data collected? • A reliable risk statement will always tell you exactly. For instance: • US male physicians for the heart attack and aspirin experiment. • Always identify the reference class for yourself.

  7. Why do doctors prescribe aspirin to heart attack victims? • In this study 22 071 male physicians (aged from 40 to 84) were randomly assigned to two groups. • One group took an aspirin every second day and the other group took a placebo (a pill with no active ingredient which looked just like an aspirin). • The participants did not know whether they were taking aspirin or the placebo.

  8. Why do doctors prescribe aspirin to heart attack victims?

  9. Why do doctors prescribe aspirin to heart attack victims?

  10. The risk of having a heart attack for those taking aspirin every second day is 0.55 the risk for those taking a placebo - a 45% decrease in risk. • Roughly speaking the difference is approximately 1 person in 100 having a heart attack if they take aspirin as opposed to approximately 2 people in 100 having a heart attack if they don’t take anything.

  11. Study: Example 2

  12. In 2006 the results of a study carried out among 132 271 Jewish children born in Israel during 6 consecutive years in the 1980s were published in the Archives of General Psychiatry. • The objective of the study was to examine the relationship between father’s age at birth of child (offspring) and their risk of autism.

  13. The offspring were assessed for autism at age 17 years.

  14. Risk

  15. Interpretation • The risk of having a child with autism for those in the 30 - 39 age group is 1.6 times the risk for those in the 15 - 29 age group (percentage change is 64%). • The risk of having a child with autism for those in the 40+ age group is 6 times the risk for those in the 15 - 29 age group (percentage change is 479%). • Remember the numbers per 1000: • 15 - 29 age group it is 0.55 • 30 - 39 age group it is 1.62 • 40+ age group it is 3.25

  16. How to understand risk in 13 clicks • http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7937382.stm

  17. Reckoning with Risk Gigerenzer, Gerd (2002). Reckoning with Risk London: Penguin Books Chapter One: Uncertainty Let’s demystify a couple of concepts around risk!

  18. Test results may be false

  19. It all depends on risk taking behaviour for HIV testing • No known risk taking behaviour, German men: • About 0.01% have HIV; • If have HIV, 99.9% chance test will be positive; • If does not have HIV, 99.9% chance test will be negative. • Think of 10 000 men . . .

  20. It is a good idea to make a table like this

  21. 10 000 men with no known risk-taking behaviour • 1 will have HIV and will test positive; • 9999 will not have HIV; • 99.9% of 9999 = 9989 men whose test will be negative; • So 10 will not have HIV and yet will test positive; • Altogether 11 will test positive, but only 1 will have HIV.

  22. For risk takers • Think of 10 000 men who engage in risk taking behaviour; • 150 can be expected to have HIV and most likely all will test positive; • 9850 are not infected and 10 will test positive; • 160 test positive and 150 have the virus. • What is the chance one of these men who has a positive test, does not have HIV?

  23. What is the chance one of these men who has a positive test, does not have HIV?

  24. Side Effects of Prozac • If a man takes Prozac, there is a 30% to 50% chance he will have a sexual problem. • What does this mean? • Very hard to know. • Solution: person giving the information needs to specify the reference class and the risk. • For instance, For 10 men who take prozac, 3 -5 will have a problem.

  25. Mammograms • A 40 year-old friend has a positive result after a mammogram. • How likely is she to have breast cancer?

  26. Mammogram Probabilities • The probability a woman aged 40 has breast cancer is about 1%. • If she has cancer, the probability she tests positive on a mammogram is 90%. • If she does not have cancer, the probability she tests positive is 9 percent. • What are the chances a woman who tests positive has breast cancer?

  27. It helps to set up a table (keep in mind that this relates to a woman aged 40)

  28. Think Frequencies • Imagine 10000 woman aged 40: • 100 have breast cancer and 90 will probably test positive, but 10 will test negative; • 9900 don’t have breast cancer, but about 891 of them will also test positive and 9009 will test negative; • 981 have tested positive and 90 have cancer; • The chance of having breast cancer given a positive test is 9.2%.

  29. One for you to try: • For symptom-free people over 50 who are screened using the hemoccult test for colorectal cancer: • The probability one of these people has colorectal cancer is 0.3%; • If a person hascolorectal cancer, the probability is 50% he/she has a positive test; • If a person does not have colorectal cancer, the probability is 3% he/she has a positive test; • What is the probability a person (symptom free, over 50) who has a negative test actually has colorectal cancer?

  30. Using a table

  31. Think about 10 000 people • 30 will have CR cancer; • Of these, 15 will test negative; • 9970 will not have CR cancer; • Of these, 9671 will test negative; • 9686 will test negative of whom 15 have CR cancer; • probability of having the disease if test is negative is 15/9686 or approx 0.15%. • A small chance?

  32. DNA tests • The probability of a DNA match occurring by chance is 1 in 100 000. • Rephrase it: Out of every 100 000 people, 1 will show a match. • Think about the size of the population: if 1 000 000 people live in your city, then 10 would have DNA that matches the sample.

  33. Franklin’s Law • Nothing is certain except death and taxes! • Despite all the efforts to reassure us it is not so, we live in a twilight of uncertainty! • What can we do?

  34. Gerd’s advice • Use frequencies (numbers, not probabilities or percentages) to think about probabilities; • Find out the reference class; • Remember the experts may not understand either; • Think for yourself.

  35. Test your knowledge of risk: • For men in the U.S., the lifetime risk of prostate cancer is nearly 17 percent. What does this mean? Choose 1 or 2 or 3: • In general about 17 of every 100 males in the United States will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime. This is the absolute risk of prostate cancer for U.S. males. • Every man in the U.S. has a 17 percent chance of dying from prostate cancer. • If a man is over 40, his chance of getting prostate cancer in the next year is almost 17 percent.

  36. Test your knowledge of risk: For men in the U.S., the lifetime risk of prostate cancer is nearly 17 percent. What does this mean? Choose 1 or 2 or 3: In general about 17 of every 100 males in the United States will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime. This is the absolute risk of prostate cancer for U.S. males. Every man in the U.S. has a 17 percent chance of dying from prostate cancer. If a man is over 40, his chance of getting prostate cancer in the next year is almost 17 percent.

  37. Test Your knowledge of risk • African American men have a relative risk of 1.2 for diagnosis of prostate cancer when compared to White men. What does this mean? Choose 1 or 2 or 3 • 1. The risk of a diagnosis of prostate cancer is linked to where African American men live.  • 2. Overall, African American men are more likely to be diagnosed with prostate cancer than White men. • 3. Fewer African American men than White men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer.

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