Reporting Risk Ratios
Reporting Risk, Rates, and Ratios in Academic Manuscripts: Principles and Best Practices
Principles and Best Practices

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Introduction
Clearly Define the Type of Measure
When reporting statistics, the first thing you should do is explicitly say how one measure differs from another. In general, we distinguish between three broad categories of measures:
- Risk: This includes absolute risk (AR), relative risk (RR), and risk differences.
- Rate: This may include incidence rates, prevalence rates, mortality rates.
- Ratio: This includes odds ratios (ORs), hazard ratios (HRs), and rate ratios.
Each type of measure has a different meaning and use. For example, relative risk is most often used in cohort studies to describe the likelihood of an event between a group that was exposed and a group that was not (e.g., risks of developing disease), whereas odds ratios are used in case-control studies (Park & Han, 2022; Kerr et al., 2023). Therefore, if you use the wrong measure or even fail to define your measure clearly, you may seriously miscommunicate information.
- Time is a necessary component in any measure of rate or risk. If the timeframe is not reported, the reader cannot assess whether the described risk relates to an acute or chronic incident. The risk of cardiovascular mortality over 10 years, could be very dissimilar to that of a 6-month risk.
- Murad et al. (2025) demonstrate how the ambiguous recognition of follow-up periods will inevitably lead to inappropriate comparisons and unintentionally wrong clinical implications. Therefore, any measures of risk, rate, and ratio need to denote the period over which the data was collected or the outcome was observed.
Relative vs. Absolute Measures
Choosing the Right Measure: Risk Ratio vs. Odds Ratio
Summary of Best Practices
What to Report | Why It's Important |
---|---|
Statistical measure type | Clarifies analytic approach and comparability |
Denominator and numerator | Promotes transparency and reproducibility |
Time frame | Places findings in temporal context |
Population unit | Standardizes interpretation across studies |
Confidence intervals | Shows statistical precision and reliability |
Conclusion
References
1. Chao, Y. S., Wu, C. J., Po, J. Y., Huang, S. Y., Wu, H. C., Hsu, H. T., Cheng, Y. P., Lai, Y. C., & Chen, W. C. (2023). The upper limits of risk ratios and recommendations for reporting risk ratios, odds ratios, and rate ratios. Cureus, 15(4), e37799. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.37799
2. Murad, M. H., Tomlinson, G. A., Brignardello-Petersen, R., Wang, Z., & Lin, L. (2025). Confidence intervals of the relative risk and odds ratio can predict when the optimal information size in a meta-analysis is not met. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, 179, 111653. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2024.111653
3. Kerr, S., Greenland, S., Jeffrey, K., Millington, T., Bedston, S., Ritchie, L., Simpson, C. R., Fagbamigbe, A. F., Kurdi, A., Robertson, C., Sheikh, A., & Rudan, I. (2023). Understanding and reporting odds ratios as rate-ratio estimates in case-control studies. Journal of Global Health, 13, 04101. https://doi.org/10.7189/jogh.13.04101
4. Richardson, R., Kanellopoulou, A., & Dwan, K. (2025). Risk ratios, odds ratios and the risk difference. BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine, 30(1), 66–67.
5. Park, S. H., & Han, K. (2022). How to clearly and accurately report odds ratio and hazard ratio in diagnostic research studies? Korean Journal of Radiology, 23(8), 777. https://doi.org/10.3348/kjr.2022.0237
6. Newland, M. C. (2024). The proper calculation of risk ratios: How and why. Perspectives on Behavior Science, 47(4), 803–814. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40614-024-00379-z
7. Davies, S. T., Helmus, L. M., & Quinsey, V. L. (2022). Improving risk communication: Developing risk ratios for the VRAG-R. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 37(1–2), 835–862. https://doi.org/10.1177/0886260520910342
8. Colnet, B., Josse, J., Varoquaux, G., & Scornet, E. (2023). Risk ratio, odds ratio, risk difference… Which causal measure is easier to generalize? arXiv preprint, arXiv:2303.16008. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2303.16008
9. Ning, Y., Lam, A., & Reilly, M. (2022). Estimating risk ratio from any standard epidemiological design by doubling the cases. BMC Medical Research Methodology, 22(1), 157. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12874-022-01676-7
10. Lininger, M. R., Root, H. J., Camplain, R., & Barger, S. D. (2024). Describing the appropriate use and interpretation of odds and risk ratios. Research in Sports Medicine, 32(3), 504–510. https://doi.org/10.1080/15438627.2023.2178529