by PeterBennett (Editor), KennethCalman (Editor)
Controversies about risks to public health regularly hit the news, whether about food safety, environmental issues, medical interventions, or lifestyle risks such as drinking. To those trying to manage or regulate risks, public reactions sometimes seem bizarre. To the public, the behaviour of those supposedly in charge can seem no less odd. Trust is currently at a premium. This new paperback edition of Risk Communication and Public Health brings together a wide variety of perspectives on risk communication, from the health professions, academia, campaigning organisations, government and its advisory committees, independent consultancies and think tanks. It should be of interest not only to those involved in risk assessment or communication but to anyone interested in the role of science and the media in the political process, and how one bit of the system is responding to demands for greater openness and participation. While each chapter is self- contained, the discussion moves progressively through: an introduction to risk communication as a topic of research studies of prominent cases and the lessons to be drawn from them contributions to the wider debate about procedures, power and institutions proposals for promoting good practice in risk communication, in Government, the Health Service and elsewhere.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 272
Edition: New Ed
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Published: 01 Feb 2001
ISBN 10: 0198508999
ISBN 13: 9780198508991
Book Overview: Entered for the Society of Authors and the Royal Society of Medicine Medical Book Awards 2001