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Sunday, December 31, 2017

Figure1 | Patient and Cellular Characteristics Determine Efficacy ...
src: circres.ahajournals.org

A risk-benefit ratio is the ratio of the risk of an action to its potential benefits. Risk-benefit analysis is analysis that seeks to quantify the risk and benefits and hence their ratio.

Analyzing a risk can be heavily dependent on the human factor. A certain level of risk in our lives is accepted as necessary to achieve certain benefits. For example, driving an automobile is a risk most people take daily, also since it is mitigated by the controlling factor of their perception of their individual ability to manage the risk-creating situation. When individuals are exposed to involuntary risk (a risk over which they have no control), they make risk aversion their primary goal. Under these circumstances individuals require the probability of risk to be as much as one thousand times smaller than for the same situation under their perceived control (a notable example being the common bias in the perception of risk in flying vs. driving).


Video Risk-benefit ratio



Evaluations

Evaluations of future risk can be:

  • Real future risk, as disclosed by the fully matured future circumstances when they develop.
  • Statistical risk, as determined by currently available data, as measured actuarially for insurance premiums.
  • Projected risk, as analytically based on system models structured from historical studies.
  • Perceived risk, as intuitively seen by individuals.

Maps Risk-benefit ratio



Medical research

For research that involves more than minimal risk of harm to the subjects, the investigator must assure that the amount of benefit clearly outweighs the amount of risk. Only if there is a favorable risk-benefit ratio may a study be considered ethical.

The Declaration of Helsinki, adopted by the World Medical Association, states that biomedical research cannot be done legitimately unless the importance of the objective is in proportion to the risk to the subject. The Helsinki Declaration and the CONSORT Statement stress a favorable risk-benefit ratio.


2015 ESC/ERS Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of ...
src: erj.ersjournals.com


See also

  • Benefit shortfall
  • Cost-benefit analysis
  • Odds algorithm
  • Optimism bias
  • Reference class forecasting

Asthma and Anti-TNF-α Therapeutics Jessie Scott MCB ppt video ...
src: slideplayer.com


References

Source of article : Wikipedia