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People often talk about the indirect value of "raising awareness" or "consciousness raising".

For issues that most people already know about (like cancer), is there value to raising awareness?

Oddthinking
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    It's one thing to know cancer is bad. It is another to understand that [lung cancer kills 1.38 million people per year](http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ijc.25516/full). My point being the definition of issues that people "know about" is a bit of a murky one. – Oddthinking Oct 30 '12 at 23:08
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    One could argue that charitable donations toward a cause would increase proportionately with the number of people "aware" of the cause. If this is the type of "value" you are talking about, that is. – jdstankosky Oct 31 '12 at 12:45
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    what value/impact are you looking for? actual improvements in curing cancer, or generating donations being easier? – Ryathal Oct 31 '12 at 12:47
  • I certainly became more concerned when I saw the odds of 1 in 3 adults in the UK having cancer of some kind during their lives! – Rory Alsop Oct 31 '12 at 13:05
  • I don't think that cancer is an issue that "most people know about". There are a lot of people with cancer that don't go to the doctor until the pain is big enough that there's no other way than going to the doctor. They don't know enough about cancer to be aware of the fact that they have cancer before it's too late. Early detection of cancer is a controversial issue, but pretend that everybody knows everything about cancer isn't true. – Christian Oct 31 '12 at 13:35
  • Consciousness raising is a term that has for a lot of people a different meaning than raising awareness. For a lot of people raising their consciousness is a value in itself. The question get's more straightforward when you simply focus on raising awareness. – Christian Oct 31 '12 at 13:41
  • Spanish speaker here: Is raising awareness similar to the phrase "One death is a tragedy, a thousand is a statistic"? Or more with actually knowing what is going on around the world? – Fabián Heredia Montiel Oct 31 '12 at 13:55
  • Don't forget the question isn't specifically about cancer. We could take corruption as example. My guest answer in that case would be yes, since people would start to ask questions and ask for explanation. – Zonata Oct 31 '12 at 18:08
  • Since this is more related to a meta-study I found [BAKER, S. B., SWISHER, J. D., NADENICHEK, P. E. and POPOWICZ, C. L. (1984), Measured Effects of Primary Prevention Strategies. The Personnel and Guidance Journal, 62: 459–464. doi: 10.1111/j.2164-4918.1984.tb00255.x](http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.2164-4918.1984.tb00255.x/abstract) - unfortunately I can't access the paper so I can't tell if it's any good. The abstract doesn't tell much though. – Alexander Janssen Oct 31 '12 at 19:46
  • Margaret McCartney, a british GP, argues in her book [The Patient Paradox](http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Stars-Destination-S-F-MASTERWORKS/dp/0575094192/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1351723406&sr=8-1) that much "raising awareness" is just lobbying under a different name and results in distorted health priorities for both people and health providers. – matt_black Oct 31 '12 at 23:01
  • Today my awareness was raised about people living with Aphasia. From a 3 min clip I now have a better understanding of how to communicate and recognise people living with this condition. I consider that to be meaningful. In recent months I have also been made aware of factory farming practices and the brutal way we are torturing animals and our planet. I have suffered from nightmares and feel overwhelmed that the scope of this issue is so large, violent and damaging. Is this MEANINGFUL awareness? I would have to say that although I consider the message important the choice of delivery for it w –  Dec 23 '13 at 09:34
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    @TabithaTwitchet that means nothing. "Raising awareness" is just a euphemism for "getting you to fork over money in donations"... – jwenting Dec 23 '13 at 09:54
  • http://slatestarcodex.com/2013/12/22/public-awareness-campaigns/ has a collection of examples of public awareness campaigns that either work and don't work, with the author noting that he can't find any meaningful pattern by which to distinguish the effective campaigns from the ineffective or outright harmful ones. – Kaj_Sotala Dec 23 '13 at 10:23

2 Answers2

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The paper BAKER, S. B., SWISHER, J. D., NADENICHEK, P. E. and POPOWICZ, C. L. (1984), Measured Effects of Primary Prevention Strategies conducted a meta-analysis on 40 primary prevention studies in the context of education.

For evaluating the effectiveness they defined the Effect Size to be:

where ES is the Effective Size - means the benchmark how well prevention helped, X_t the "posttest mean of the treatment condition", X_c the "posttest mean of control condition" and SD_c the posttest standard deviation of the control condition.

Their benchmark ist defined after Smith, Mary Lee, Gene V. Glass, and Thomas I. Miller. The benefits of psychotherapy. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980:

Based on the interpretation format in Smith, Glass and Miller (1980), the combined primary prevention ES (without outlayer) of .55 means that a hypothetical person not having received a primary prevention treatment but being at the mean of the control group on dependant measures will improve on those dependant measures to a position .55 standard deviations above the mean after experiencing primary prevention treatmeant. In terms of percentile ranks, this represents an increase from the 50th to approximately the 73rd percentile. In other words, persons not previously exposed to primary prevention strategies similar to those listed in Table 1 should improve 23 percentile points after having received such a treatment. Different figures are appropriate when making estimates for the the specific subcategories of primary prevention strategies listed in Table 2 (e.g. moral education, values clarification).

After explaining their benchmark, they define the performance indices:

Cohen (1996) suggested that the criteria for judging effect size magnitude should be: .20 to .49 = small, .50 to .79 = medium, and above .80 = large. Therefor, based on Cohen's (1969) criteria, the overall primary prevention strategy effect size (.91; with outlayer) and the effect size for career maturity enhancement (1.33), communication skills training (3.90 and .93; with and without the outlayer, repsectively), deliberate psychological education programs (1.43), and deliberate psychological education and moral education programs combined (.83) may be classified as large. Furthermore, the overall effective siize for primary prevention programs (:55; without outlayer) and those for values clarification programs (.69) and all values clarification programs combined (.51) may be classified as medium. Finally, the effective size for cognitive coping skills training programs (.26), moral education programs (.42), substance abuse preventions programs (.34) and programs blending values clarification with other strategies (.37) are viewd as low according to Cohen's (1969) standards. Readers should note that the number of studies in several categories is relatively small, which suggests caution in intepreting the comparison of strategies.

Table 2 (Permanent link, in case imgur is down)

Disclaimer: I ain't no social science scholar, so take my interpretation with care.

Summary:

  • prevention helps on a general scale in the context of this meta-study.
  • it fails in moral education
  • it fails in "coping skills training founded on cognitive-behaviour modification principles"
  • it's excellent in "communication skills programs"
  • it fails in "moral education programs"
  • it also fails in "substance abuse programs"

You have to keep in mind that this meta-study is from 1984. Anecdotal evidence and personal expericen tell me that the "substance abuse programs" improved quite a lot in the last 30 years, and I bet that there are improvements in other areas as well.

P.S.: Needs copyediting, I had to manually type in all the quotes. Also, since I ain't no expert in that field it'd be helpful if someone familiar with the topic could review this posting.

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Yes it can have an impact; but that isn't necessarily a good thing

There are plenty of issues in the world that people ought to know more about and raising awareness of them should not be a problem; unfortunately there are many things that feel as though people ought to be more aware of, but that awareness just causes harm.

I'm going to point out some of the second kind.

The sorts of issues that make us feel good are issues where we think awareness will save lives. There are several good examples in the field of cancer screening. The argument that raising awareness is good comes because the conventional belief is that screening can only save lives by catching cancer early and achieves this miracle at no cost to the patient. So we should encourage people's awareness of screening programmes and other ways to catch early signs of the disease.

There are several problems here. The first is that no screening programme is costless. Some pretty certainly cause more harm than good (see Does screening for prostate cancer save lives?); others are still the subject of much debate (see Is routine screening for breast cancer for asymptomatic women worthwhile?). When the trio of benefit to harm is not clear then improving awareness of the programme is itself of dubious benefit.

The second problem comes because of the way awareness is raised. If you (mistakenly) believe that medical screening is all upside, then your goal in raising awareness is to propagandise the uptake of screening. What you are unlikely to do is to give the patient a balanced view of the issues so they can make their mind up. This isn't just me being cynical but has been demonstrated. See the comments on patient advice on breast screening in the BMJ in 2008 and in the BMJ in 2006. As the 2008 article reports:

No mention is made of the major harm of screening—that is, unnecessary treatment of harmless lesions that would not have been identified without screening. This harm is well known and acknowledged, even among screening enthusiasts. It is in violation of guidelines and laws for informed consent not to mention this common harm, especially when screening is aimed at healthy people.

We do know, in some cases, that patients who are given carefully structured and unbiased advice are far less likley to choose screening and medical intervention (see example here).

The third problem is related to the second. It is about what sort of organisations are attempting to increase our awareness of things. This is fairly obvious, but worth stating explicitly: they are often, effectively, lobbyists for a cause. This is one of the causes of problem two: lobbyists don't obey an oath of impartiality; they want your attention on their campaign, not someone else's. Medical charities, for all the good they can do, are not exempt from this. One question that should be asked when they are trying to raise awareness is: are they just redistributing our awareness away from their competitors? I have no particular objection to charities raising money for their cause. But they may end up sending unbalanced views of the benefits of screening or, perhaps worse, unbalanced views about the health issues faced by the average person and the steps they should take to minimise that risk. AS Margaret McCartney, a british GP points out in her recent book, The Patient Paradox (the quote is p275 in my paperback edition):

All healthcare charities wish for more attention than they currently get...We have become so inured to the 'need' for awareness that most people never bother questioning whether it is a good idea to receive information about our health this way. Most people who hear the call to awareness will never have the disease or disorder in question, and the evidence-based messages about what can improve your quality and quantity of life ... are drowned out in the clamour.

Another problem with charity lobbying is that is tends to distort health spending towards sentimental or sensational headlines and away from boring, but more effective, ways of allocating resources on healthcare. Margaret McCartney has a whole chapter "The problem with PR" on this.

So raising awareness to raise money for the charity looks OK; raising awareness to encourage screening may well cause harm; and raising awareness to grab a bigger share of other people's spending for your cause is at best distorting and a worst very harmful if the money flows to the sensational headline not the real need.

The bottom line is that, even in the area of medical charities where "raising awareness" feels like it ought to be all good, there are plenty of ways for it to actually do harm

matt_black
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  • So in summary, a *little* knowledge is a dangerous thing -- sometimes even more dangerous than total ignorance. And most awareness campaigns don't invest the effort to give complete education, either because they don't think there's time (breast cancer awareness) or because they're damn well aware that a thorough examination of their argument would reveal massive holes (antivax, for instance) – Shadur Dec 23 '13 at 10:34