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A dialogic model of conversations about risk: Coordinating perceptions and achieving quality decisions in cancer care
Authors:Dorothy L Collins  Richard L Street Jr
Institution:1. Department of Communication Studies, Texas A&M University, 4234 TAMU, College Station, TX 77840, USA;2. Houston Center for Quality of Care & Utilization Studies, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA
Abstract:We propose that academic scholarship and clinical practice should conceptualize communication about risk as a dialogic and relational process. This conceptual paper addresses how clinical decisions about cancer treatment are impacted by different risk perceptions. Patients and health care providers base their risk perceptions on analytic or experiential reasoning processes. However, most risk communication research in the clinical context only examines the transmissive and persuasive communication of these different risk perceptions. This transmissive communication results in a monologic model that limits the opportunities for patients and clinicians to incorporate their perspectives into a shared understanding. The dialogic model of risk communication contributes to a quality cancer care decision because it creates open space to find connections between patient values and clinical evidence while allowing the parties to have a satisfactory level of involvement. The final section of the paper describes theory behind a dialogic perspective and offers guidelines for how to implement it in risk communication to improve clinical decision making.
Keywords:Risk communication  Dialogue  Risk perception  Shared decision making  Patient&ndash  provider communication  Cancer
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