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Communication of scientific uncertainty: International case studies on the development of folate and vitamin D Dietary Reference Values

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journal contribution
posted on 2014-08-29, 00:00 authored by K A Brown, L De Wit, L Timotijevic, A M Sonne, L Lähteenmäki, N Brito Garcia, M Jeruszka-Bielak, E Sicińska, A N Moore, Mark LawrenceMark Lawrence, M M Raats
Objective Transparent evidence-based decision making has been promoted worldwide to engender trust in science and policy making. Yet, little attention has been given to transparency implementation. The degree of transparency (focused on how uncertain evidence was handled) during the development of folate and vitamin D Dietary Reference Values was explored in three a priori defined areas: (i) value request; (ii) evidence evaluation; and (iii) final values. Design Qualitative case studies (semi-structured interviews and desk research). A common protocol was used for data collection, interview thematic analysis and reporting. Results were coordinated via cross-case synthesis. Setting Australia and New Zealand, Netherlands, Nordic countries, Poland, Spain and UK. Subjects Twenty-one interviews were conducted in six case studies. Results Transparency of process was not universally observed across countries or areas of the recommendation setting process. Transparency practices were most commonly seen surrounding the request to develop reference values (e.g. access to risk manager/assessor problem formulation discussions) and evidence evaluation (e.g. disclosure of risk assessor data sourcing/evaluation protocols). Fewer transparency practices were observed to assist with handling uncertainty in the evidence base during the development of quantitative reference values. Conclusions Implementation of transparency policies may be limited by a lack of dedicated resources and best practice procedures, particularly to assist with the latter stages of reference value development. Challenges remain regarding the best practice for transparently communicating the influence of uncertain evidence on the final reference values. Resolving this issue may assist the evolution of nutrition risk assessment and better inform the recommendation setting process.

History

Journal

Public health nutrition

Volume

18

Issue

8

Pagination

1378 - 1388

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Location

Cambridge, Eng

ISSN

1368-9800

eISSN

1475-2727

Language

english

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Cambridge University Press