1NURSING ASSIGNMENT Relative risk is a concept in which, the connective linkage between a health related risk factor and the relative development of the associated health problem is determined and hence, it helps to connect the risk factor and emerging health issue by developing a link or relationship between them (Pesch et al., 2012). In this context of breast cancer, the doctor prescribed several changes in the patient’s lifestyle as the doctor believes that changes in the lifestyle can lead to improve her condition. Hence, the formula for relative risk that is relative risk which is a result of probability of the occurrence of improved health outcome and multiplication of it with loss of negative health outcome will be the relative risk of the patients affected with breast cancer (Cuzick et al., 2014).Therefore, the risk of breast cancer in this section will be higher. Secondly, the attributed risk is the health outcome, if the exposure to deleterious health environment is deleted from the scenario. In this scenario of patient affected with breast cancer, it is the rate at which the risk factors of breast cancer are at contact with the patients versus the rate of completely unexposed population (De Martel et al., 2012). Hence, for this assessment the population having complete risk of breast cancer will be assessed with the help of population that do not bear risk related to breast cancer. Therefore, according to the assessment, if 21 patients out of 100 do bear the risk of breast cancer and 79 people has no risk related to it, then while deciding the risk related to emergence of breast cancer to a greater likelihood will be determined and the risk of acquiring breast cancer for both the groups will be higher (Zheng et al., 2013). Hence, in this way, both the relative and attributed risk will determine that risk of breast cancer will be assessed with both cancer and non-cancerous patients for the assessment.
2NURSING ASSIGNMENT References Cuzick, J., Sestak, I., Forbes, J. F., Dowsett, M., Knox, J., Cawthorn, S., ... & Bonanni, B. (2014). Anastrozole for prevention of breast cancer in high-risk postmenopausal women (IBIS-II):aninternational,double-blind,randomisedplacebo-controlledtrial.The Lancet,383(9922), 1041-1048. De Martel, C., Ferlay, J., Franceschi, S., Vignat, J., Bray, F., Forman, D., & Plummer, M. (2012). Global burden of cancers attributable to infections in 2008: a review and synthetic analysis.The lancet oncology,13(6), 607-615. Pesch, B., Kendzia, B., Gustavsson, P., Jöckel, K. H., Johnen, G., Pohlabeln, H., ... & Wichmann, H. E. (2012). Cigarette smoking and lung cancer—relative risk estimates for the major histological types from a pooled analysis of case–control studies.International journal of cancer,131(5), 1210-1219. Zheng, J. S., Hu, X. J., Zhao, Y. M., Yang, J., & Li, D. (2013). Intake of fish and marine n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids and risk of breast cancer: meta-analysis of data from 21 independent prospective cohort studies.Bmj,346, f3706.