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Frameworks for risk communication and disease management: the case of Lyme disease and countryside users

Frameworks for risk communication and disease management: the case of Lyme disease and countryside users
Frameworks for risk communication and disease management: the case of Lyme disease and countryside users
Management of zoonotic disease is necessary if countryside users are to gain benefit rather than suffer harm from their activities, and to avoid disproportionate reaction to novel threats. We introduce a conceptual framework based on the pressure–state–response model with five broad responses to disease incidence. Influencing public behaviour is one response and requires risk communication based on an integration of knowledge about the disease with an understanding of how publics respond to precautionary advice. A second framework emphasizes how risk communication involves more than information provision and should address dimensions including points-of-intervention over time, place and audience. The frameworks are developed by reference to tick-borne Lyme borreliosis (also known as Lyme disease), for which informed precautionary behaviour is particularly relevant. Interventions to influence behaviour can be directed by knowledge of spatial and temporal variation of tick abundance, what constitutes risky behaviour, how people respond to information of varying content, and an understanding of the social practices related to countryside use. The frameworks clarify the response options and help identify who is responsible for risk communication. These aspects are not consistently understood, and may result in an underestimation of the role of land-based organizations in facilitating appropriate precautionary behaviour
0962-8436
1471-2970
Quine, Christopher P.
41e8d527-4fb3-4951-b492-2d0ddac16c57
Barnett, Julie
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Dobson, Andrew D.M.
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Marcu, Afrodita
25ba37d2-9068-4c58-8527-fb799152add3
Marzano, Mariella
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Moseley, Darren
c8b053d1-d501-49ec-999e-180a96fe82e8
O'Brien, Liz
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Randolph, Sarah E.
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Taylor, Jennifer L.
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Uzzell, David
77b9583b-ae49-46ee-a0c9-6c07e1979fad
Quine, Christopher P.
41e8d527-4fb3-4951-b492-2d0ddac16c57
Barnett, Julie
e075f8d9-cf31-4bfc-a6be-41988b5ce764
Dobson, Andrew D.M.
6061baa1-08da-48f4-85d0-56101d7591bc
Marcu, Afrodita
25ba37d2-9068-4c58-8527-fb799152add3
Marzano, Mariella
bedf41c0-de95-485d-99d5-0f867092fcd4
Moseley, Darren
c8b053d1-d501-49ec-999e-180a96fe82e8
O'Brien, Liz
8e6ddade-1e32-4fd2-9d2a-7244e5cd75ac
Randolph, Sarah E.
ff9c2883-0063-4c08-bf18-ebb541807a76
Taylor, Jennifer L.
f52159ed-8035-4395-a0a3-dc33bfa47264
Uzzell, David
77b9583b-ae49-46ee-a0c9-6c07e1979fad

Quine, Christopher P., Barnett, Julie, Dobson, Andrew D.M., Marcu, Afrodita, Marzano, Mariella, Moseley, Darren, O'Brien, Liz, Randolph, Sarah E., Taylor, Jennifer L. and Uzzell, David (2011) Frameworks for risk communication and disease management: the case of Lyme disease and countryside users. Philosophical Transactions of The Royal Society B Biological Sciences, 366 (1573), 1471-2970. (doi:10.1098/rstb.2010.0397).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Management of zoonotic disease is necessary if countryside users are to gain benefit rather than suffer harm from their activities, and to avoid disproportionate reaction to novel threats. We introduce a conceptual framework based on the pressure–state–response model with five broad responses to disease incidence. Influencing public behaviour is one response and requires risk communication based on an integration of knowledge about the disease with an understanding of how publics respond to precautionary advice. A second framework emphasizes how risk communication involves more than information provision and should address dimensions including points-of-intervention over time, place and audience. The frameworks are developed by reference to tick-borne Lyme borreliosis (also known as Lyme disease), for which informed precautionary behaviour is particularly relevant. Interventions to influence behaviour can be directed by knowledge of spatial and temporal variation of tick abundance, what constitutes risky behaviour, how people respond to information of varying content, and an understanding of the social practices related to countryside use. The frameworks clarify the response options and help identify who is responsible for risk communication. These aspects are not consistently understood, and may result in an underestimation of the role of land-based organizations in facilitating appropriate precautionary behaviour

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Quine et al_frameworks for risk communications_Phil Trans_2011.pdf - Other
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More information

Published date: 30 May 2011
Additional Information: Funded by ESRC: Assessing the potential risk of, and possible responses to, zoonotic diseases on the development of recreational use of (RES-229-25-0007)
Organisations: Psychology

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Local EPrints ID: 359382
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/359382
ISSN: 0962-8436
PURE UUID: 5a1f0323-04e0-489b-8248-10ac92f7e668

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Date deposited: 29 Oct 2013 10:30
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 15:21

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Contributors

Author: Christopher P. Quine
Author: Julie Barnett
Author: Andrew D.M. Dobson
Author: Afrodita Marcu
Author: Mariella Marzano
Author: Darren Moseley
Author: Liz O'Brien
Author: Sarah E. Randolph
Author: Jennifer L. Taylor
Author: David Uzzell

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