Ordinary risks and accepted fictions: how contrasting and competing priorities work in risk assessment and mental health care planning.
Michael CoffeyRachel CohenAlison FaulknerBen HanniganAlan SimpsonSally BarlowPublished in: Health expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy (2016)
Despite limitations, risk assessment is treated as legitimate work by professionals. Risk assessment practice operates as a type of fiction in which poor predictive ability and fear of consequences are accepted in the interests of normative certainty by all parties. As a consequence, risk adverse options are encouraged by workers and patients steered away from opportunities for ordinary risks thereby hindering the mobilization of their strengths and abilities.