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  1. The Challenge of Providing the Public with Actionable Information during a Pandemic.Leslie E. Gerwin - 2012 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (3):630-654.
    Analysis of media reporting on the H1N1 vaccine during the 2009 pandemic reveals a dissonance between the nature and content of the reporting, the government's messages, and the public's perceptions of vaccine safety and desirability. Despite careful attention to history and especially the lessons offered by Richard Neustadt and Harvey Fineberg in their study of the 1976 “Epidemic that Never Was,” government officials failed to escape criticism for decisions made and actions taken in the midst of the unfolding contagion threat. (...)
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  • The Challenge of Providing the Public with Actionable Information during a Pandemic.Leslie E. Gerwin - 2012 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (3):630-654.
    Can a country with a free press and a robust political debate provide its citizens with actionable information so that they can protect themselves from a threat to their health or safety? By actionable information, I mean accurate facts and reasonable interpretations of those facts upon which an individual should rely in making reason-based decisions. In the context of public health, this includes information that allows an individual to weigh the risk to one’s self, family, and community before deciding to (...)
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