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by throwmeaway_pls
2095 days ago
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> it puts public health policymakers in a dilemma > they have to walk a line between fully detailed truth, and simplified advice that people en masse are more inclined to believe and follow I know they are acting in good faith. However, the field also has a lot of received wisdom that may or may not be true. There’s clearly a bag of tricks they believe must be used to achieve a set of self-set goals, and I think a more straightforward approach along with dialogue would have been wiser in this instance. The alternative is that some people will lose trust and won’t comply. You don’t want that if your plan requires everyone to comply. |
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The dilemma they face is no matter what they do, some people will lose trust and won’t comply.
Getting an optimal outcome in the middle of that dilemma is impossible to get right. Not just difficult, but impossible due to the back and forth inter-reactions between individuals, groups and policy.
So the process inevitably involves some mixture of politics and data, and multiple points of view that differ. There's no getting away from it.
I'm not going to say they have got it right. The different points of view and debate have to continue after all, to pursue the "best" outcome whatever it may be.
Only that I have some sympathy with the public health messaging dilemma, and I hope other people can take something useful from the knowledge that public health policy people face this dilemma, and are not just incompetent, blunt instruments, or trying to hoodwink everyone.