Genetic Test Results and Disclosure to Family Members: Qualitative Interviews of Healthcare Professionals’ Perceptions of Ethical and Professional Issues in France
Male
0301 basic medicine
Communication
Health Personnel
Genetic Counseling
Disclosure
3. Good health
03 medical and health sciences
Humans
Family
Female
France
Genetic Testing
Qualitative Research
DOI:
10.1007/s10897-015-9896-7
Publication Date:
2015-10-19T04:19:12Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
AbstractThe benefit of disclosing test results to next of kin is to improve prognosis and—in some cases—even prevent death though earlier monitoring or preventive therapies. Research on this subject has explored the question of intra‐familial communication from the standpoint of patients and relatives but rarely, from the standpoint of healthcare professionals. The purpose of this study was to interview relevant healthcare professionals in France, where legislation framing the issue was recently passed. A qualitative study consisting of semi‐structured interviews was set up to get a clearer picture of the challenges arising from this issue, its consequences in terms of medical care‐service practices, and the positions that frontline professionals have taken in response to this new legal framework. The findings from eight interviews with 7 clinical geneticists and 1 genetic counselor highlight very different patterns of practices among care services and among the genetic diseases involved. It is equally crucial to investigate other issues such as the nature of genetic testing and its consequences in terms of disclosing results to kin, the question of the role of genetic counseling in the disclosure process, the question of prescription by non‐geneticist clinicians, and practical questions linked to information content, consent and medical follow‐up for patients and their relatives.
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