Life is full of risks, so how do we understand and respond to those risks with our everyday lifestyle choices, reactions to community-wide emergencies and disasters, and decisions concerning medical treatments for ourselves and our families?

This conference will explore how our perceptions of risk are formed and how our understanding of risk influences our behavior and decisions. The program will provide an overview of what is known about risk and how psychology, literacy and experience, among other factors, influence our perceptions of risk. Our presenters will focus on risk assessment in medical decision- making by both patients and practitioners. Strategies for effective risk communication will be presented and applied to lifestyle and treatment choices and to the personal and societal use of

Program Schedule:
  7:30 - 8:30am Registration and continental breakfast
    8:30-11:00am Keynote addresses
  11:00-11:30am Refreshment break
  11:30-12:30pm Panel discussion — closing remarks

Who should attend: Anyone interested in gaining a better understanding of how our perceptions of risk are formed, how these impact health and medical decision-making, and how to improve risk assessment and communication skills should attend. Health practitioners and public policymakers, systems leaders, payers and funders, health care educators, advocates and researchers should all find the speakers and panel discussion informative and thought provoking.

If you are interested in earning CME, CEU or CEC credits click here to learn more.

Register Now
Thursday, May 3, 2012
7:30am - 12:30pm

Hartford Marriott Farmington
15 Farm Springs Road, Farmington, Connecticut

Please register by April 23, 2012

Keynote Speakers

Dan Ariely
David Ropeik
Ropeik is an award winning science reporter, blogger, Harvard lecturer, consultant, public speaker and author of How Risky Is It Really: Why Our Fears Don’t Always Match the Facts, which explores the human system of risk perception and how it is driven as much by emotion and instinct as by reason and fact. Ropeik provides guidance for how to make healthier choices in a risky modern world.
Dan Ariely
Brian Zikmund-Fisher, PhD

Zikmund-Fisher is a faculty member in both Health Behavior and Health Education and Internal Medicine at the University of Michigan. He co-directed the National Survey of Medical Decisions (the DECISIONS Study) and studies risk perceptions in contexts as diverse as cancer treatment, genetic testing, and dioxin exposure. His work focuses on how to make risk data meaningful (especially by using visual displays) and support informed decision making.
Dan Ariely
Moderator
Chisara N. Asomugha,
MD, MSPH, FAAP

Asomugha is the Community Services Administrator for the City of New Haven and a board certified pediatrician. She oversees the City’s Health, Youth and Elderly Services Departments. Previously, Asomugha was a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholar at Yale University. She is also an ordained minister and Vice President of the Asomugha Foundation, an international non-profit that promotes educational opportunities for youth in the US and Africa.

The conference is free of charge but registration is required.

Photos may be taken at this event and used in Donaghue Foundation materials.

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