How do Physicians Decide to Refer Their Patients for Psychiatric Genetic Counseling? A Qualitative Study of Physicians' Practice

被引:10
|
作者
Leach, Emma [1 ]
Morris, Emily [1 ,2 ]
White, Hannah J. [3 ]
Inglis, Angela [1 ,2 ]
Lehman, Anna [1 ]
Austin, Jehannine [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ British Columbia, Dept Med Genet, Vancouver, BC, Canada
[2] Univ British Columbia, Dept Psychiat, Rm A3-112,CFRI Translat Lab Bldg,938 W 28th Ave, Vancouver, BC V5Z 4H4, Canada
[3] Calif State Univ Stanislaus, Turlock, CA 95382 USA
关键词
Psychiatric genetic counseling; Psychiatry; Genetic counseling; Referral practices; PRIMARY-CARE; MENTAL-ILLNESS; INTERNALIZED STIGMA; GENOMIC MEDICINE; INDIVIDUALS; PERCEPTIONS; SPECIALIST; DISORDERS; KNOWLEDGE; ATTITUDES;
D O I
10.1007/s10897-016-9961-x
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Psychiatric genetic counseling (PGC) is an emerging specialty discipline within the genetic counseling profession. A specialist PGC service was founded in 2012 in Vancouver, Canada, and though patient benefits have been demonstrated, many physicians do not regularly refer patients to the service despite awareness of its availability. We conducted a qualitative study involving semi-structured telephone interviews with Vancouver-based physicians who were aware of the PGC service to explore this phenomenon. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, coded, and analysed for emergent themes. Consistent with a grounded theory approach, constant comparison was employed throughout data collection and analysis. Analyses of interviews conducted with 12 physicians revealed that referral practices were informed by perceptions about the purpose of PGC and interpretation of patient cues. Physicians perceived PGC as an information-focused intervention, and considered referral when patients explicitly expressed desire for information about recurrence risk or etiology that they felt unable to adequately address themselves. Even when physicians identified psychotherapeutic benefits of PGC, patient needs of this nature were not perceived as cues prompting referral to PGC. These data suggest that further work is necessary to position PGC in physicians' minds as a service that could potentially benefit most individuals with psychiatric disorders and their families, and that it encompasses more than information provision. It is important to increase physicians' awareness of the complementary role that genetic counselors can play to that of the physician in providing psychotherapeutically oriented counselling about illness etiology.
引用
收藏
页码:1235 / 1242
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Do physicians know when to refer patients for genetic testing?
    Presutti, R. John
    Pujalte, George G. A.
    Woodruff, Amelita
    Agarwal, Anjali
    Robinson, Chase N.
    Reese, Robyn L.
    Helmi, Haytham
    Wight, Jeff T.
    JOURNAL OF GENETIC COUNSELING, 2024, 33 (04) : 786 - 792
  • [2] How do surgeons decide to refer patients for adjuvant cancer treatment? Protocol for a qualitative study
    Urquhart, Robin
    Kendell, Cynthia
    Sargeant, Joan
    Buduhan, Gordon
    Johnson, Paul
    Rayson, Daniel
    Grunfeld, Eva
    Porter, Geoffrey A.
    IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 2012, 7
  • [3] How do surgeons decide to refer patients for adjuvant cancer treatment? Protocol for a qualitative study
    Robin Urquhart
    Cynthia Kendell
    Joan Sargeant
    Gordon Buduhan
    Paul Johnson
    Daniel Rayson
    Eva Grunfeld
    Geoffrey A Porter
    Implementation Science, 7
  • [4] DO PHYSICIANS PREACH WHAT THEY PRACTICE - A STUDY OF PHYSICIANS HEALTH HABITS AND COUNSELING PRACTICES
    WELLS, KB
    LEWIS, CE
    LEAKE, B
    WARE, JE
    JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1984, 252 (20): : 2846 - 2848
  • [5] How do supervising physicians decide to entrust residents with unsupervised tasks? A qualitative analysis
    Choo, Kevin J.
    Arora, Vineet M.
    Barach, Paul
    Johnson, Julie K.
    Farnan, Jeanne M.
    JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL MEDICINE, 2014, 9 (03) : 169 - 175
  • [6] How practice setting affects family physicians' views on genetic screening: a qualitative study
    Fok, Rose Wai-Yee
    Ong, Cheryl Siow Bin
    Lie, Desiree
    Ishak, Diana
    Fung, Si Ming
    Tang, Wern Ee
    Sun, Shirley
    Smith, Helen
    Ngeow, Joanne Yuen Yie
    BMC FAMILY PRACTICE, 2021, 22 (01)
  • [7] How practice setting affects family physicians’ views on genetic screening: a qualitative study
    Rose Wai-Yee Fok
    Cheryl Siow Bin Ong
    Désirée Lie
    Diana Ishak
    Si Ming Fung
    Wern Ee Tang
    Shirley Sun
    Helen Smith
    Joanne Yuen Yie Ngeow
    BMC Family Practice, 22
  • [8] How do parents of child patients compare consultations with homeopaths and physicians? A qualitative study
    Rise, Marit By
    Steinsbekk, Aslak
    PATIENT EDUCATION AND COUNSELING, 2009, 74 (01) : 91 - 96
  • [9] WITHDRAWING LIFE SUPPORT - DO FAMILIES AND PHYSICIANS DECIDE AS PATIENTS DO
    SILVA, JEM
    KJELLSTRAND, CM
    NEPHRON, 1988, 48 (03): : 201 - 205
  • [10] How do physicians decide to treat: an empirical evaluation of the threshold model
    Benjamin Djulbegovic
    Shira Elqayam
    Tea Reljic
    Iztok Hozo
    Branko Miladinovic
    Athanasios Tsalatsanis
    Ambuj Kumar
    Jason Beckstead
    Stephanie Taylor
    Janice Cannon-Bowers
    BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, 14