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JNCI Monographs 1999 1999(25):167-170;
© 1999 by Oxford University Press
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Journal of the National Cancer Institute Monographs, No. 25, 167-170, 1999
© 1999 Oxford University Press

Living Can Be Hazardous to Your Health: How the News Media Cover Cancer Risks

Cristine Russell

Affiliation of author: Freelance writer and special health correspondent, The Washington Post.

Correspondence to: Cristine Russell, 43 Huckleberry Ln., Darien, CT 06820

For more than two decades, the news media has bombarded the public with often conflicting information about health risks, contributing to an atmosphere of hype and hysteria about cancer and other diseases. Improvements in media reporting of health risks require greater efforts by both those who cover the news and those who create it. Guidelines for bringing more perspective and balance to media coverage of risk are provided. These include putting cancer in context with other diseases, explaining absolute and relative risks, differentiating between individual and population risks, stressing the degree of uncertainty of new research and how it fits with previous data, covering the process as well as end results of science, understanding different media constraints and needs, and taking into account the diverse backgrounds and needs of the target audience—the general public.



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