Understanding how risk is discussed in health care (2024)

Published: August 2015

This patient information provides advice on understanding how your healthcare professionals will discuss risk with you.

The information here aims to help you better understand your health and your options for treatment and care. Your healthcare team is there to support you in making decisions that are right for you. They can help by discussing your situation with you and answering your questions.

Risk is the chance that any activity or action could happen and harm you. Almost everything we do has an associated risk. Living is a risky business. People will generally take risks if they feel that there is an advantage or benefit. We need to look at risks and benefits together. Normally the benefits of an action should outweigh the risks. There is no such thing as a zero risk. How you view risk depends to a large extent on your own circ*mstances and ‘comfort zone’.

This information will help you understand how your healthcare professionals will discuss risk with you in relation to your health care and medical treatment.

This information covers:

  • why you need to know about risk
  • how risk is discussed
  • how risk is presented in everyday life
  • the best ways for risk to be explained

Within this information, we may use the terms ‘woman’ and ‘women’. However, it is not only people who identify as women who may want to access this information. Your care should be personalised, inclusive and sensitive to your needs, whatever your gender identity.

A glossary of medical terms is available atA-Z of medical terms.

Understanding risk

Sometimes research evidence may not be clear about a particular risk or benefit. This is why you may receive different information from different healthcare professionals. It may be because of the situation in which your healthcare professional is working, their own personal experience, your personal situation or because the true risk is not known. Uncertainty exists.

Understanding risk can be difficult but it is helpful when you work in partnership with your healthcare professional.

Reference

Calman KC, Royston G. Personal paper: Risk language and dialects.British Medical Journal1997;315:939–42.

Why do I need to know about risk?

When you are considering having a procedure, intervention or screening test for yourself or someone else, you need to know about the benefits and risks or any uncertainties to help you to make an informed decision.

How you view a risk depends on one or more of the following:

  • the chance of the event occurring (frequency)
  • the chance of a condition being detected by a screening test (detection rate)
  • the benefits of the treatment or screening
  • how much harm may be caused:
    • if it is life-threatening
    • if it is short-term (temporary) or long-term (permanent)
  • how much you feel in control of the decision
  • how much you trust the person discussing the risk with you
  • whether you feel you understand the situation sufficiently.

Some of these factors will be more important to you than others.

How is risk discussed?

Healthcare professionals use research evidence to describe the chance of an event occurring in the context of an entire population. So your healthcare professional can tell you one woman in nine (1 in 9) will develop breast cancer. What they cannot tell you is whether the ‘one’ woman who develops breast cancer will be you.

If you have a screening test for a particular condition or disease, the results tell you if you are at ‘high risk’ or ‘low risk’ for that condition or disease. For example, if you are pregnant you will be routinely offered a screening test for Down syndrome. The results of this test will show if your unborn baby has a ‘high risk’ or a ‘low risk’ of having Down syndrome. A high-risk result does not mean that your unborn baby definitely has Down syndrome. It means that the risk of Down syndrome is more than 1 in 250 (of 250 pregnant women, more than one woman has an unborn baby with Down syndrome). In this situation, you would be offered a further test to find out if your unborn baby is one of the babies with Down syndrome.

Even if you have a low-risk result, there is a chance that your unborn baby may have Down syndrome but it may be helpful to know that the chance is small.

Risk can be given as numbers or words, or both. This table below shows how risk should be described in healthcare:

Understanding how risk is discussed in health care (1)

People’s views of the descriptions of ‘very rare’ or ‘common’ regarding harm or satisfaction vary greatly concerning health care. Your concerns, anxieties and fears about the present and the future are very personal and may affect how you view risk. Some people find it is more useful to discuss risk using numbers or pictures rather than words.

How is risk presented in everyday life?

Health risks are talked about every day – sometimes well, sometimes poorly.

Often it can be difficult to sort out the real facts of a matter. Take, for example, the confusion over the 1995 ‘pill scare’. Scientists reported that some oral contraceptives doubled the risk of thromboembolism (a blood clot) compared with other oral contraceptives. To say that something ‘doubles’ sounds a huge amount. What the initial report did not mention, however, was that the risks were only 1 in 6000 to start with – which is ‘rare’. The new risk – 1 in 3000 (or 2 in 6000) – is still rare. In addition, the increased risk of death was only about one person in a million. The risk had not been put into context and a result there was panic in the media and among the public.

Sometimes percentages are used when the overall numbers are very small indeed. It is very important that the facts are explained in a meaningful way.

What are the best ways for risk to be explained?

Good communication between you and your healthcare professional promotes a trusting relationship and brings greater satisfaction to you both. It also helps you to take more responsibility for decisions about your own health care.

When explaining risk healthcare professionals should:

  • involve you fully
  • give you the opportunity to have someone with you (such as a friend, partner or relative)
  • know and understand your circ*mstances and how this could affect you personally
  • describe the risk in different ways; for example, ‘your risk of breast cancer is 1 in 9 or your chance of never getting breast cancer is 8 in 9’
  • give you correct and up-to-date information
  • give you information that is relevant to you
  • be honest, frank and open
  • speak clearly
  • have empathy
  • listen to your concerns
  • give you an opportunity to ask questions
  • give you time
  • provide sources of information such as leaflets or websites
  • check that you have fully understood

. . . and on your part, you should:

  • say if you don’t understand
  • ask if you want information presented in a different way
  • say if you need more time.

Your healthcare professional may explain the information in a number of different ways, such as pictures, graphs and other tools to help you make a decision. These help to ensure a better understanding.

Shared Decision Making

If you are asked to make a choice, you may have lots of questions that you want to ask. You may also want to talk over your options with your family or friends. It can help to write a list of the questions you want answered and take it to your appointment.

Ask 3 Questions

To begin with, try to make sure you get the answers to3 key questions, if you are asked to make a choice about your healthcare:

  1. What are my options?
  2. What are the pros and cons of each option for me?
  3. How do I get support to help me make a decision that is right for me?

*Ask 3 Questions is based on Shepherd et al. Three questions that patients can ask to improve the quality of information physicians give about treatment options: A cross-over trial. Patient Education and Counselling, 2011;84:379-85

Sources and acknowledgements

This information has been developed by the RCOG Patient Information Committee. It is based on the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) Clinical Governance Advice No. 7,Presenting Informationon Risk (December 2008). The clinical governance advice contains a full list of the sources of evidence we have used.

This leaflet was reviewed before publication by women attending clinics in in Newcastle-upon-Tyne and Surrey and by the RCOG Women’s Network.

This patient information leaflet is based on the RCOG’s Clinical Governance AdvicePresenting Information on Risk, which contains a full list of the sources of evidence used to produce this guidance.

Understanding how risk is discussed in health care (2024)

FAQs

What is risk in health care? ›

A health risk is the chance or likelihood that something will harm or otherwise affect your health.

Why is it important to understand how risk factors can lead to health problems? ›

Know Your Risk. Whether due to family history or lifestyle habits, knowing your risk of developing health issues can help you to reduce them. Here are some important factors to discuss with your primary care doctor to keep you on the path of health and wellness.

What is risk in your own understanding? ›

Risk is the probability of an outcome having a negative effect on people, systems or assets. Risk is typically depicted as being a function of the combined effects of hazards, the assets or people exposed to hazard and the vulnerability of those exposed elements.

What is risk taking in health care? ›

Positive risk taking is a process which identifies the potential benefit or harm which could result from a particular choice being exercised, reduces the risk of harm and then weighs up the expected benefits against the risk of harm which remains.

Why is identifying risks important in healthcare? ›

Risk management is important for all types of organizations, but it's especially important in health care because human lives are on the line. A good health care risk management plan can reduce patient health risks as well as financial and liability risks.

Why is it important to know about risk? ›

The ability to understand risks enables the organization to make confident business decisions. It protects the organization from the risk of unexpected events that can cause it a financial and reputational loss.

What is risk approach in healthcare? ›

Risk management in healthcare is a complex set of clinical and administrative systems, processes, procedures, and reporting structures designed to detect, monitor, assess, mitigate, and prevent risks to patients.

What does "at risk" in healthcare mean? ›

At-risk individuals are people with access and functional needs (temporary or permanent) that may interfere with their ability to access or receive medical care before, during, or after a disaster or public health emergency.

How does risk relate to health and wellness? ›

Simply put, a health risk is the chance or likelihood that something will harm or otherwise affect someone's health. This doesn't mean that it will definitely happen.

What does risk mean in health and social care? ›

Your healthcare team is there to support you in making decisions that are right for you. They can help by discussing your situation with you and answering your questions. Risk is the chance that any activity or action could happen and harm you.

What is a risk in health and safety? ›

When we refer to risk in relation to occupational safety and health the most commonly used definition is 'risk is the likelihood that a person may be harmed or suffers adverse health effects if exposed to a hazard. '

What is the definition of a risk? ›

Risk is the probability that an accidental phenomenon produces in a given point of the effects of a given potential gravity, during one given period.

What is the definition of risk in health and safety? ›

When we refer to risk in relation to occupational safety and health the most commonly used definition is 'risk is the likelihood that a person may be harmed or suffers adverse health effects if exposed to a hazard. '

What is the definition of risk in health insurance? ›

Risk: uncertainty associated with potential financial gains or losses. Risk-Based Arrangement: an agreement in which a CMS Innovation Center model participant is held financially responsible for the quality and cost of care delivered to beneficiaries in exchange for flexibilities regarding the way they deliver care.

References

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