Part 1. Risk, communication and the public understanding of
uncertainty in public health
1. Peter Bennett, Kenneth Calman Sarah Curtis, Denis Smith:
Understanding public responses to risk
2. Denis Smith, Alan Irwin, Moira Fischbacher: Bringing light to
the shadows and shadows to the light: risk, risk management and
risk communication
3. Lynn Frewer, Heleen Van Dijk, Arnout Fischer: Consumer
perceptions of the risks and benefits associated with food
hazards
4. Nick Pidgeon, Karen Henwood: The social amplification of risk
framework (SARP): Theory, critiques and policy implications
5. Larry Barton: From trouble to trauma: the need for
public-private health partnerships
Part 2. Public health risk communication in practice
6. Hugh Pennington: The role of the media in public health crises:
Perspectives from the UK and Europe
7. Denis Smith, Moira Fischbacher, David BaMaung: Where do we go
from here? The evacuation of city centres and the communication of
public health risks from extreme threats
8. Pat Troop, Anton Dittner: Radiation in London: managing risk
communication in the Litvinenko affair
9. Rachel Casiday: Risk Communication in the British Pertussis and
MMR Vaccine Controversies
10. Judith Petts, Heather Draper, Jon Ives, Sarah Damery: Risk
communication and pandemic influenza
11. David Pryer, Pat Hewitt: CJD: risk communication in a health
care setting
12. Eva Elliott, Emily Harrop, Gareth Williams: Contesting the
science: public health knowledge and action in controversial
land-use developments
13. Denis Smith, Kenneth Calman: A Precautionary tale - the role of
the precautionary principle in policy making for public health
Part 3. From the inside looking out, looking in - organisational
issues around preparation and response for public health risks
14. Sue Davies: Changes to food risk management and
communication
15. Moira Fischbacher: Communicating across publics and between
organisations: the case of childhood accidents
16. Denis Smith, Ray Hudson: Exporting Pandora's Box -
Exploitation, risk communication and public health problems
associated with the export of hazard
17. Sara Fuller, Karen Bickerstaff, Fu-Meng Khaw, Sarah Curtis:
Communication about persistent environmental risks: problems of
knowledge exchange and potential of participative techniques
18. Christine Dunn: Geographical information systems as a means for
communicating about public health
19. Simon French, John Maule: Exploring and Communicating Risks:
Scenario-based workshops
20. Peter Bennett, Sarah Curtis, Kenneth Calman, Denis Smith:
Embedding better practice in risk communication and public health
Following a first degree in Physics, Peter Bennett studied the
logic, history and philosophy of science, obtaining his DPhil from
Sussex University. He joined the Operational Research Group at
Sussex, before moving to Strathclyde University, where he became
Reader in Management Science and Director of Postgraduate Studies.
At the same time, he was involved in applied research and
consultancy projects for clients ranging from community groups
to
transnational companies. He joined the Department of Health as a
Principal OR Analyst in 1996, and since then has been heavily
involved in analyses of risks to Public Health. He produced the
Department of Health
guidelines on Risk Communication. He now leads a cross-disciplinary
team of analysts in the Heath Improvement and Protection
Directorate of the Department, and is acting Head of Profession for
Operational Research. Sir Kenneth Calman is Chancellor of the
University of Glasgow. He graduated in medicine (with commendation)
in 1967. He moved into the Department of Surgery in Glasgow and
proceeded to the Fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons and an
MD Thesis with Honours on Organ
Preservation. In 1972, he was the MRC Clinical Research Fellow at
the Chester Beatty Research Institute in London and returned to
Glasgow in 1974 as Professor of Oncology. He remained in that post
for 10
years. In 1984 he became Dean of Postgraduate Medicine and
Professor of Postgraduate Medical Education at the University of
Glasgow and Consultant Physician with an interest in palliative
care at Victoria Infirmary, Glasgow. He is a member of the Nuffield
Council on Bioethics and President of the Institute of medical
Ethics. Sarah Curtis is Professor of Health and Risk at Durham
University. She has extensive international research experience in
geography of health and health services,
especially on inequalities of health and access to health care,
health care needs assessment, health impact assessment and
development of healthy public policy. Her research covers topics
including: adaption
of health and social care systems to changing risks of climate
change (funded by EPSRC); Health Impact Assessment of urban
regeneration schemes, (for Dept of Health, and other agencies);
development of healthy public policy (with agencies in Canada and
UK); ESRC funded research on effects of the socio-economic
environment on well-being and health of adults and children;
research funded by British Academy on hospital design;
International research on migration, health and wellbeing supported
by
ESRC; comparative research on geographical variation in psychiatric
service use supported by the Office of Mental Health for New York
State. Denis Smith is Professor of Management at the University
of
Glasgow. His main research interests are in the areas of:
organisational resilience, risk and crisis management; adverse
events in health care; complexity and organisational performance
(especially around health care organisations and the emergency
services); human error and systems failure; and the role of
embedded error cost in strategic change. Professor Smith's work has
been concerned with issues of risk management and business
continuity and this has been carried out over a 25 year period.
His early work was concerned with the evacuation of urban areas due
to extreme events - an interest he maintains to this day. He has
also undertaken research on the training and performance of
crisis
management teams, the production of emergency/contingency plans
(and their limitations), and the processes by which vulnerability
can be generated within organisations and urban 'space'.
Review from previous edition Anyone involved in risk communication
should find this book useful. It is up to date and well referenced
and indexed.
*BMJ*
This is a risky book. It is published at a time when public
interest in public health issues is probably greater than at any
time before. The book is risky because it is honest: honest about
the state of knowledge about risk and risk communication across a
wide range of public health issues, and honest about the state of
relationships between science, the public and those public
institutions responsible for regulating risk. Risk Communication
and Public Health should be required reading for policy makers and
professionals responsible for public health... campaigners,
academics and students will also find it of value. An edited
collection with crisp analysis of the issues.
*Posted on Amazon.co.uk*
This book is packed with information. It has been well constructed
by the editors and brings together a wide variety of perspectives
from a very impressive list of authors... it is highly readable,
densely packed and valuable source of reference and learning... It
comes highly recommended as an addition to the bookshelf for all
public health practitioners.
*Teri Knight, Health Services Management Centre in the Royal
Society of Medicine 15, 67-70*
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