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Beware the Cell Phone, and Pass the Chocolate Cake!

If you want to understand how well human beings perceive risk, just stand in line at the gas station when lottery tickets are all the rage, or spend an hour or two loitering at the quarter slots in Las Vegas.

We humans aren’t very swift at calculating the odds of becoming multimillionaires in either setting, and our all-too-human misperception of risk doesn’t stop at our pocketbooks.

Studies document wildly inaccurate perceptions of risks of skin cancer, food poisoning, cardiovascular disease, accidents caused by texting while driving, and smokeless tobacco. We even believe, quite avidly, that while the American public is getting a tad pudgy, our own hip-to-waist ratios are doing just fine.

Two studies presented in poster form at ASCO’s annual meeting in Chicago highlight some pretty eyebrow-raising misperceptions of risk when it comes to cancer.

Such as – the fact that young adult women profoundly misperceive their lifetime risks of breast and colon cancer, as reported by Katherine Lang and her associates at Virginia Commonweath University in Richmond and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Ms. Lang and her team analyzed responses from 369 women recruited for a study of cancer risk communication and found that 11% would likely be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lives, based on their family history and other factors. More than twice that percentage, 24%, estimated that they would get breast cancer.

The same trend, with slightly lower levels of misperception, held for colon cancer. While 3% of the group – average age, 33years – faced a real lifetime risk of colon cancer, 19% were convinced they would get the disease.

A second study, this one from Ireland, found that 81% of 525 participants in an online survey were concerned about their cancer risk, while, of course, a far lower percentage would be diagnosed with the disease in the general population.

One in three had no clue that obesity might be a risk factor, but the same percentage believed that wearing a tight bra was a risk. Almost half believed that a blow to the breast could up one’s chance of being diagnosed with breast cancer.

Stress was believed to increase cancer risk by 85% of those queried, and cell phones by 86%. Genetics was deemed by 87% of this largely female (82%) cohort to "strongly" increase risk.

The group, surveyed by a team led by nutritional science student Lisa Burns at University College Cork (Ireland), got the well-publicized message that smoking increases cancer risk (99%). In addition, processed meat (86%), genetically modified foods (81%), food irradiation (77%), cleaning agents (73%), aerosol use (71%), and cheese (29%) were considered cancer promoters by the respondents, 36% of whom held college degrees.

What lowers cancer risk?

The winners in that category were organic food (61%), followed by detox diets (35%), and luck (12%).

The authors concluded that while many members of the general public have an awareness of classic risk factors for cancer such as smoking and a poor diet, "most overestimate risk attributable to genetics, environment, and stress, and underestimate age, obesity, and sunlight."

Most depressing of all to those who would place their bets on cancer prevention messages, "One in 5 believes lifetime risk cancer is non-modifiable," the group concluded.

Dr. Freed is a clinical psychologist in Santa Barbara, Calif., and a medical journalist.

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If you want to understand how well human beings perceive risk, just stand in line at the gas station when lottery tickets are all the rage, or spend an hour or two loitering at the quarter slots in Las Vegas.

We humans aren’t very swift at calculating the odds of becoming multimillionaires in either setting, and our all-too-human misperception of risk doesn’t stop at our pocketbooks.

Studies document wildly inaccurate perceptions of risks of skin cancer, food poisoning, cardiovascular disease, accidents caused by texting while driving, and smokeless tobacco. We even believe, quite avidly, that while the American public is getting a tad pudgy, our own hip-to-waist ratios are doing just fine.

Two studies presented in poster form at ASCO’s annual meeting in Chicago highlight some pretty eyebrow-raising misperceptions of risk when it comes to cancer.

Such as – the fact that young adult women profoundly misperceive their lifetime risks of breast and colon cancer, as reported by Katherine Lang and her associates at Virginia Commonweath University in Richmond and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Ms. Lang and her team analyzed responses from 369 women recruited for a study of cancer risk communication and found that 11% would likely be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lives, based on their family history and other factors. More than twice that percentage, 24%, estimated that they would get breast cancer.

The same trend, with slightly lower levels of misperception, held for colon cancer. While 3% of the group – average age, 33years – faced a real lifetime risk of colon cancer, 19% were convinced they would get the disease.

A second study, this one from Ireland, found that 81% of 525 participants in an online survey were concerned about their cancer risk, while, of course, a far lower percentage would be diagnosed with the disease in the general population.

One in three had no clue that obesity might be a risk factor, but the same percentage believed that wearing a tight bra was a risk. Almost half believed that a blow to the breast could up one’s chance of being diagnosed with breast cancer.

Stress was believed to increase cancer risk by 85% of those queried, and cell phones by 86%. Genetics was deemed by 87% of this largely female (82%) cohort to "strongly" increase risk.

The group, surveyed by a team led by nutritional science student Lisa Burns at University College Cork (Ireland), got the well-publicized message that smoking increases cancer risk (99%). In addition, processed meat (86%), genetically modified foods (81%), food irradiation (77%), cleaning agents (73%), aerosol use (71%), and cheese (29%) were considered cancer promoters by the respondents, 36% of whom held college degrees.

What lowers cancer risk?

The winners in that category were organic food (61%), followed by detox diets (35%), and luck (12%).

The authors concluded that while many members of the general public have an awareness of classic risk factors for cancer such as smoking and a poor diet, "most overestimate risk attributable to genetics, environment, and stress, and underestimate age, obesity, and sunlight."

Most depressing of all to those who would place their bets on cancer prevention messages, "One in 5 believes lifetime risk cancer is non-modifiable," the group concluded.

Dr. Freed is a clinical psychologist in Santa Barbara, Calif., and a medical journalist.

If you want to understand how well human beings perceive risk, just stand in line at the gas station when lottery tickets are all the rage, or spend an hour or two loitering at the quarter slots in Las Vegas.

We humans aren’t very swift at calculating the odds of becoming multimillionaires in either setting, and our all-too-human misperception of risk doesn’t stop at our pocketbooks.

Studies document wildly inaccurate perceptions of risks of skin cancer, food poisoning, cardiovascular disease, accidents caused by texting while driving, and smokeless tobacco. We even believe, quite avidly, that while the American public is getting a tad pudgy, our own hip-to-waist ratios are doing just fine.

Two studies presented in poster form at ASCO’s annual meeting in Chicago highlight some pretty eyebrow-raising misperceptions of risk when it comes to cancer.

Such as – the fact that young adult women profoundly misperceive their lifetime risks of breast and colon cancer, as reported by Katherine Lang and her associates at Virginia Commonweath University in Richmond and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Ms. Lang and her team analyzed responses from 369 women recruited for a study of cancer risk communication and found that 11% would likely be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lives, based on their family history and other factors. More than twice that percentage, 24%, estimated that they would get breast cancer.

The same trend, with slightly lower levels of misperception, held for colon cancer. While 3% of the group – average age, 33years – faced a real lifetime risk of colon cancer, 19% were convinced they would get the disease.

A second study, this one from Ireland, found that 81% of 525 participants in an online survey were concerned about their cancer risk, while, of course, a far lower percentage would be diagnosed with the disease in the general population.

One in three had no clue that obesity might be a risk factor, but the same percentage believed that wearing a tight bra was a risk. Almost half believed that a blow to the breast could up one’s chance of being diagnosed with breast cancer.

Stress was believed to increase cancer risk by 85% of those queried, and cell phones by 86%. Genetics was deemed by 87% of this largely female (82%) cohort to "strongly" increase risk.

The group, surveyed by a team led by nutritional science student Lisa Burns at University College Cork (Ireland), got the well-publicized message that smoking increases cancer risk (99%). In addition, processed meat (86%), genetically modified foods (81%), food irradiation (77%), cleaning agents (73%), aerosol use (71%), and cheese (29%) were considered cancer promoters by the respondents, 36% of whom held college degrees.

What lowers cancer risk?

The winners in that category were organic food (61%), followed by detox diets (35%), and luck (12%).

The authors concluded that while many members of the general public have an awareness of classic risk factors for cancer such as smoking and a poor diet, "most overestimate risk attributable to genetics, environment, and stress, and underestimate age, obesity, and sunlight."

Most depressing of all to those who would place their bets on cancer prevention messages, "One in 5 believes lifetime risk cancer is non-modifiable," the group concluded.

Dr. Freed is a clinical psychologist in Santa Barbara, Calif., and a medical journalist.

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