| Literature DB >> 27311843 |
Sarah Salway1, Parveen Ali2, Giles Ratcliffe3, Elizabeth Such4, Nasaim Khan5, Helen Kingston5, Oliver Quarrell6.
Abstract
Populations practising customary consanguineous marriage have a higher incidence of autosomal recessive genetic disorders than those in which reproductive partners are usually unrelated. In the absence of any national-level response, English service developments to address the additional needs of families living with or at risk of such disorders have been locally led. These interventions remain in their infancy here, as elsewhere in Europe, and important questions remain regarding how appropriate, effective and sustainable responses can be operationalised in practice. This formative service review employed four local case studies together with wider consultation exercises over a 4-year period (2011-2015) to document recent responses to this area of need, issues arising and lessons to inform future work. Service components included the following: enhancements to genetic services to provide family-centred, culturally competent approaches to counselling and testing; community genetic literacy approaches; and capacity development among health professionals. Local approaches were, however, very varied in their detail, scope, level of investment and longevity. The provisions of culturally competent genetic counselling services and community-level genetic literacy interventions were generally well received by those who accessed them. Coordinated action across all service components appeared important for an effective service, but healthcare professionals, particularly general practitioners, were often difficult to engage in this agenda. An evaluative culture and engagement in a wider community of practice had supported service development across sites. However, sustaining investment was challenging, particularly where new services were not well integrated into core provision and where commissioning was driven by expectations of short-term reductions in infant mortality and disability.Entities:
Keywords: Autosomal recessive genetic conditions; Consanguinity; Cousin marriage; Ethnic health inequalities; Formative service review
Year: 2016 PMID: 27311843 PMCID: PMC4960028 DOI: 10.1007/s12687-016-0269-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Community Genet ISSN: 1868-310X
Overview of service responses across three strands of intervention in the four sites in 2011/2
| Site | Stated objective(s)/outcome | Enhanced family-centred genetic counselling and testing | Enhancing community genetic literacy | Enhancing confidence and competence of health and other professionals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Population: 148,000 | To improve take up of genetic services by proactive targeting towards families affected by known autosomal recessive disorders | Part-time specialist genetic counsellor. Pilot intervention evaluated. Retrospective review of cases and subsequently prospective referral in. Home visits offered as well as clinic. Cascading to family members. Recent increase in resource to allow recruitment of additional team member to support counsellor and avoid reliance on one worker alone. | No activity to date. | Educational sessions run by the specialist genetic counsellor for a variety of health professionals. Including paediatricians, midwives, health visitors and GPs. |
| 2 Population: 200,000 | Families at greatest risk of inheriting complex disorders are more informed about their risks and are using the services available to them | No enhanced activity to date. | One-year community engagement programme using a hub and spokes model. Community development workers trained and supported to deliver 1-to-1 and group sessions with service users and colleagues. Training booklets used and retained by service users to share with family. Signposting to GPs. Workshops at mosques. Dialogue with Imams. Inclusion of messages within widely distributed general infant mortality leaflet. | One-day training course delivered several times by external consultant. |
| 3 Population: 270,000 | To reduce infant and perinatal mortality among societies with a preference for cousin marriage linked to high prevalence of recessive genetic disorders. | Part-time community genetic counsellor. Retrospective review of genetic case notes to identify families. Prospective referral from health professionals established; 1-to-1 counselling offered, home visits and outreach sessions. Cascading to family members. | Community events held in mosques and children’s centres using external consultant. | A series of two-day training events delivered by external consultant. |
| 4 Population: 300,000 | To offer improved reproductive choices by enhancing the awareness of and access to genetic services by Black and ethnic minority groups, particularly the Pakistani community. | Recruitment of specialist community genetic counsellor. Retrospective review of genetic case notes and re-contact. Home visits offered as well as clinic. Cascading to family members. Establishment of support groups for patients and carers living with conditions. | Community educator uses a range of approaches to engage local people e.g. mosques and children’s centres. Genetics community advisory group established to provide service feedback. Educational leaflets and DVD in English and Urdu. DVD posted on YouTube. Website created and operational. | Appointment of an educator in clinical genetics to provide education for all health professionals wishing to enhance skills: seminars, workshops, resources, support in clinical practice. |
Approaches to enhancing community genetic literacy
| Approach | Benefits | Challenges |
|---|---|---|
| Specialist staff outreach delivery (one-to-one or group sessions; with or without materials) | • Consistent and accurate message | • Limited reach |
| Community-based existing generalist staff delivery (one-to-one or group sessions, with or without materials) | • Trusted by community | • Require support |
| Stand-alone printed leaflets for general population (English and community languages) | • Wide reach | • Poorly targeted |
| Stand-alone printed booklets for families at risk | • Comprehensive information | • Limited reach |
| Stand-alone website material (including embedded video material) | • Easily accessed | • Unsuitable for some sub-groups |
| TV broadcast in GP practices | • Wide reach | • Poorly targeted |
| Integrated message within general infant health education materials | • Non-stigmatising | • Poorly targeted |
Change over time in service offer across original case study sites
| Site | 2011/2012 | 2013 | 2015 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Family-centred counselling and testing | Community genetic literacy | Health professionals capacity development | Family-centred counselling and testing | Community genetic literacy | Health professionals capacity development | Family-centred counselling and testing | Community genetic literacy | Health professionals capacity development | |
| 1 | ✓ | X | ✓ | ↔ | ✓ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ |
| 2 | X | ✓ | ✓ | X | ↔ | ↔ | X | ↓ | X |
| 3 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| 4 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ↑ | ↔ | ↔ | X | X | X |
✓activity underway/initiated; ↑ activity expanded; ↓ activity contracted; ↔activity continued; X no activity/activity ceased