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Background: Physician treatment preference may influence how risks are communicated in prostate cancer consultations. We identified persuasive language used when describing cancer prognosis, life expectancy, and side effects in relation to a physician's recommendation for aggressive (surgery/radiation) or nonaggressive (active surveillance/watchful waiting) treatment.
Methods: A qualitative analysis was performed on transcribed treatment consultations of 40 men with low- and intermediate-risk prostate cancer across 10 multidisciplinary providers. Quotes pertaining to cancer prognosis, life expectancy, and side effects were randomized. Coders predicted physician treatment recommendations from isolated blinded quotes. Testing characteristics of consensus predictions against the physician's treatment recommendation were reported. Coders then identified persuasive strategies favoring aggressive/nonaggressive treatment for each quote. Frequencies of persuasive strategies favoring aggressive/nonaggressive treatment were reported. Logistic regression quantified associations between persuasive strategies and physician treatment recommendations.
Results: A total of 496 quotes about cancer prognosis ( = 127), life expectancy ( = 51), and side effects ( = 318) were identified. The accuracy of predicting treatment recommendation based on individual quotes containing persuasive language ( = 256/496, 52%) was 91%. When favoring aggressive treatment, persuasive language downplayed side effect risks and amplified cancer risk (recurrence, progression, or mortality). Significant predictors ( < 0.05) of aggressive treatment recommendation included favorable side effect interpretation, downplaying side effects, and long time horizon for cancer risk due to longevity. When favoring nonaggressive treatment, persuasive language amplified side effect risks and downplayed cancer risk. Significant predictors of nonaggressive treatment recommendation included unfavorable side effect interpretation, favorable interpretation of cancer risk, and short time horizon for cancer risk due to longevity.
Conclusions: Physicians use persuasive language favoring their preferred treatment, regardless of whether their recommendation is appropriate.
Implications: Clinicians should quantify risk so patients can judge potential harm without solely relying on persuasive language.
Highlights: Physicians use persuasive language favoring their treatment recommendation when communicating risks of prostate cancer treatment, which may influence a patient's treatment choice.Coders predicted physician treatment recommendations based on isolated, randomized quotes about cancer prognosis, life expectancy, and side effects with 91% accuracy.Qualitative analysis revealed that when favoring nonaggressive treatment, physicians used persuasive language that amplified side effect risks and downplayed cancer risk. When favoring aggressive treatment, physicians did the opposite.Providers should be cognizant of using persuasive strategies and aim to provide quantified assessments of risk that are jointly interpreted with the patient so that patients can make evidence-based conclusions regarding risks without solely relying on persuasive language.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0272989X241228612 | DOI Listing |
JAC Antimicrob Resist
August 2025
School of Medical Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
Background: Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global threat, yet public awareness remains low. This study examined perceptions of current AMR communications to improve knowledge, extending previous research through qualitative data analysed using the Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM).
Methods: We held 3 focus groups ( = 15) with UK patients with recent experience of AMR and 4 ( = 14) with hospital doctors experienced in AMR treatment and communication.
Front Artif Intell
July 2025
School of Foreign Languages, Ningxia Normal University, Guyuan, China.
This study systematically compares the translation performance of ChatGPT, Google Translate, and DeepL on Chinese tourism texts, focusing on two prompt-engineering strategies. Using a mixed-methods approach that combines quantitative expert assessments with qualitative analysis, the evaluation centers on fidelity, fluency, cultural sensitivity, and persuasiveness. ChatGPT outperformed its counterparts across all metrics, especially when culturally tailored prompts were used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrans Am Clin Climatol Assoc
August 2025
Durham, NC.
The scientific research article is a careful balance of factual information and social interaction in which academic writers need to make the results of their research public and persuasive. Although scientific communication through journal articles has a history spanning over 350 years, there remains significant potential for improvement. I hypothesize that compositional strategies employed by artists-particularly landscape artists-can enhance academic scientific writing by promoting interaction and improving persuasive communication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAsian Bioeth Rev
July 2025
Department of Media, Communications, Creative Arts, Language, & Literature (MCCALL), Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.
This article introduces digital influence literacy, arguing for its inclusion in programs devoted to lessening the spread of health misinformation online. Influence literacy can be roughly understood as the capacity to recognise, analyse, navigate, and emotionally regulate feeling as it is generated, circulated and monetized over digital platforms, alternately experienced by social media users as mood, movement, sentiment, or environmental vibe. Combining insights from communications, social and behavioural psychology, digital design, and trauma studies, influence literacy can be used to better understand events like #FilmYourHospital, where a single rumour on Twitter wound up feeding into a global conspiracy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Commun
July 2025
Institute for Planetary Health Behaviour, University of Erfurt.
Health authorities have labeled health misinformation a major global health threat and academic scholars consider exposure to health misinformation a barrier to an individual's informed decision-making. However, quantitative evaluations of the persuasive impact of exposure to health misinformation produced mixed results. This study uses a meta-analytic approach to analyze the average impact of health misinformation across studies and explore potential moderators of effect size.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF