
@article{ref1,
title="Health professionals prefer to communicate risk-related numerical information using &quot;1-in-x&quot; ratios",
journal="Medical decision making",
year="2018",
author="Sirota, Miroslav and Juanchich, Marie and Petrova, Dafina and Garcia-Retamero, Rocio and Walasek, Lukasz and Bhatia, Sudeep",
volume="38",
number="3",
pages="366-376",
abstract="BACKGROUND: Previous research has shown that format effects, such as the &quot;1-in-X&quot; effect-whereby &quot;1-in-X&quot; ratios lead to a higher perceived probability than &quot;N-in-N*X&quot; ratios-alter perceptions of medical probabilities. We do not know, however, how prevalent this effect is in practice; i.e., how often health professionals use the &quot;1-in-X&quot; ratio. <br><br>METHODS: We assembled 4 different sources of evidence, involving experimental work and corpus studies, to examine the use of &quot;1-in-X&quot; and other numerical formats quantifying probability. <br><br>RESULTS: Our results revealed that the use of the &quot;1-in-X&quot; ratio is prevalent and that health professionals prefer this format compared with other numerical formats (i.e., the &quot;N-in-N*X&quot;, %, and decimal formats). In Study 1, UK family physicians preferred to communicate prenatal risk using a &quot;1-in-X&quot; ratio (80.4%, n = 131) across different risk levels and regardless of patients' numeracy levels. In Study 2, a sample from the UK adult population ( n = 203) reported that most GPs (60.6%) preferred to use &quot;1-in-X&quot; ratios compared with other formats. In Study 3, &quot;1-in-X&quot; ratios were the most commonly used format in a set of randomly sampled drug leaflets describing the risk of side effects (100%, n = 94). In Study 4, the &quot;1-in-X&quot; format was the most commonly used numerical expression of medical probabilities or frequencies on the UK's NHS website (45.7%, n = 2,469 sentences). <br><br>CONCLUSIONS: The prevalent use of &quot;1-in-X&quot; ratios magnifies the chances of increased subjective probability. Further research should establish clinical significance of the &quot;1-in-X&quot; effect.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0272-989X",
doi="10.1177/0272989X17734203",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0272989X17734203"
}