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Special Section: Health Communication Activities in Europe for Communicable Disease Prevention: Results of the Translating Health Communications Project

Reputation, Relationships, Risk Communication, and the Role of Trust in the Prevention and Control of Communicable Disease: A Review

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Pages 1550-1565 | Published online: 03 Dec 2013
 

Abstract

Population-level compliance with health protective behavioral advice to prevent and control communicable disease is essential to optimal effectiveness. Multiple factors affect perceptions of trustworthiness, and trust in advice providers is a significant predeterminant of compliance. While competency in assessment and management of communicable disease risks is critical, communications competency may be equally important. Organizational reputation, quality of stakeholder relationships and risk information provision strategies are trust moderating factors, whose impact is strongly influenced by the content, timing and coordination of communications. This article synthesizes the findings of 2 literature reviews on trust moderating communications and communicable disease prevention and control. We find a substantial evidence base on risk communication, but limited research on other trust building communications. We note that awareness of good practice historically has been limited although interest and the availability of supporting resources is growing. Good practice and policy elements are identified: recognition that crisis and risk communications require different strategies; preemptive dialogue and planning; evidence-based approaches to media relations and messaging; and building credibility for information sources. Priority areas for future research include process and cost-effectiveness evaluation and the development of frameworks that integrate communication and biomedical disease control and prevention functions, conceptually and at scale.

Acknowledgments

We acknowledge the work of Jennifer Infanti, Jane Sixsmith, and Margaret Barry. As the authors of the literature review on risk communication for the prevention and control of communicable disease, and our research partners in the European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention Health Communications project, their scholarship and collaboration has been much appreciated.

Notes

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