| Literature DB >> 29895854 |
Laura Senier1,2, Catherine Tan3, Leandra Smollin4, Rachael Lee3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: State health agencies (SHAs) have developed public health genomics (PHG) programs that play an instrumental role in advancing precision public health, but there is limited research on their approaches. This study examines how PHG programs attempt to mitigate or forestall health disparities and inequities in the utilization of genomic medicine.Entities:
Keywords: Determinants of health; Health disparities; Implementation; Precision public health; Public health genomics
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29895854 PMCID: PMC6291355 DOI: 10.1038/s41436-018-0056-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Med ISSN: 1098-3600 Impact factor: 8.822
Clinical Management Repertoire of Action
Includes illustrative quotes of clinical management repertoire for each state.
| Illustrative Examples of Clinical Management Repertoire of Action | |
|---|---|
| 1 | The Office of Public Health Genomics. A new paradigm shift. (…) To promote—It’s not, in genetics, it’s not new, this thinking. The term is new. And to promote it this way in public health is new. It was to promote three conditions. You hear about this yet? BRCA, Lynch, Familial Hypercholesterolaemia, that’s what I’m going to come to next. To promote these three conditions. Which are all dominant conditions. Very common in our population. And of extreme chronic disease significance because they’d have to do with breast and ovarian cancer, colon cancer, and heart disease. Stroke, perhaps. But anyway—So those three conditions to promote. And also that screening should be done for those. And in certain ways, shapes, and forms. (MI Interview 1—State genomics program staff, 2012) |
| 2 | So if you go back to the original premise of the health family tree, it was a population based approach, albeit in the school setting. And then, identification of those high risk families. And then really focusing on changing behavior within those high risk families. So it was the whole, really, spectrum of them, of that process. So population narrowed down to the high risk. Which still makes sense to me. How else do you identify high risk but through a population based approach? And there are some that are more cost effective than other approaches to identify those high risks. (UT Interview 1—State genomics program staff, 2013) |
| 3 | …it did seem as if, that there’s a group that is very aware of family health history. But are they, you know, white, more higher income, well educated, it’s that group that would do the 23andMe and have no concerns about privacy. Whereas the people that were less aware of it and less aware of its importance had less frequently collected and therefore shared it with a medical provider. So we take that as saying we’ve done a good job about getting the word out about family health history because we’ve been promoting it for about seven, eight years now. But it’s been very general. We need to get more targeted. And here again, when you say things like so does this plan kind of help validate work that you’re doing? That BRFSS data show us, here’s a group that isn’t aware of the importance of it, isn’t doing it yet. So should that guide some of our efforts? Yeah, we think it should. (CT Interview 1—State genomics program staff, 2014) |
Public Health Repertoire of Action—Social Vulnerabilities
Includes illustrative quotes of identified social vulnerabilities for each state.
| State Health Agency | Identified Social Vulnerabilities | Illustrative Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Michigan | ||
| I think that an awful lot of the
disparities | ||
| There just aren’t enough—aren’t enough services. If somebody lives in Washtenaw County in Ann Arbor, access to a genetics counselor is a lot easier than somebody who lives in the Upper Peninsula. They’re just, the folks from the genomics department at the state will talk about that all the time. There just aren’t enough counselors. (MI Interview 18—County health department, 2014) | ||
| And they were out there working with African American women about trying to get them in for breast and cervical cancer screening. And basically these women said I’m not dealing with that health department anymore. (…) It was just an example of a health department that was just—I went to a meeting. Their county seat is very black. Went to a meeting in their health department. And everyone in the room was white. Everyone in the room was white. And I thought to myself, “Hm, I’m beginning to see what your problem is here.” (MI Interview 15—Internal collaborations in cancer, 2013) | ||
|
| ||
| Utah | ||
| So even if you don’t have BRCA, just getting cancer treatment if you’re in a rural area, there’s just not enough cancer doctors. I mean, there’s enough cancer doctors but there’s not enough of a need in a rural area to build a whole cancer area all around it. You know. So if you’re lucky enough, like me, to live ten minutes away from a BRCA specialist, that’s great. But if you’re geographically far away or if you’re financially far away, which is a huge amount of people, it’s hard to get the care that you need. (UT Interview 20—Community collaborator, 2017) | ||
| So there’s a large Native American population here that we almost never see at our institute. We just—we never see them in cancer genetics. And then we also have a growing Hispanic—we have a large Hispanic population here. I don’t know if it’s necessarily a lack of outreach that’s been going on but we haven’t seen a lot of the Hispanic patients come through our clinic as well. (UT Interview 3—Genetic counselor, 2013) | ||
|
| ||
| Connecticut | ||
| So even when you read descriptions of Connecticut, it’s kind of like the haves and the have-nots. And so there’s greater polarity for the income disparity, which of course we know translates into health disparities as well. (…) But again, at the most base-level, we have some very glaring contradictions here as far as socioeconomic availability and affordability of healthcare. (CT Interview 1—State genomics program staff, 2014) | ||
| Transportation is a big issue. And I know this is just an aside but it’s just to underscore the point. Last week, a group of Southeast Asian folks who have a very tight knit community, Cambodian, Vietnamese, Laotian, come here. Refugees. (…) And they came in to advocate for greater services. So, they had a meeting and I was invited just to sit in and listen to what some of the issues were. Mostly because the person they were meeting with wanted me to consider them for one of the family health history projects. (…) At any rate, the two pieces they talked about were language difficulties still and transportation. (CT Interview 1—State genomics program staff, 2014) | ||
| Another huge issue for is the inequity in data. So we’re waiting, we’re very excited about genomic projects because it’s almost impossible to get the state or the federal government to collect data broken down to ethnicities. They do black, white, Hispanic, non-Hispanic. And what does that tell you? I’ve been told recently Asians were ‘others’. (…) So now they’re saying Asians are the healthiest population in the United States. And we’re saying yeah, but if you look at our community, they’re the sickest in the country and you have no data on them because it’s not granular enough. (CT Interview 27—Community collaborator, 2015) | ||
Here, the participant uses “disparities” to mean inequity. To West et al.’s point, two meanings of disparities are often conflated and confused within genomics: (1) population genetic variation and (2) inequities that describe the differences in health outcome because of social vulnerabilities and disadvantage. We find this confusion in many other interviews with participants and rely on context to make sense of the term’s usage.
Strategies to Address Clinical Management and Public Health Action Repertoires
Includes illustrative quotes of strategies deployed by each state across three areas: education of the public, education of providers, and policy anticipation.
| Strategy | Michigan | Utah | Connecticut |
|---|---|---|---|
| Education of the Public | He would ask a question. ‘My dad has it, my grandma has it’. Well, it’s known to be a family history chronic disease. And explaining what chronic disease means. Because most people, it’s episodic to them. So even though it comes and goes, they don’t recognize it’s always there. It’s really hard to explain to some folks. It was hard for me to grasp at first too. So [family history] did help me explain that chronic disease piece too. Kind of played a part. So I think it was most helpful in the relationship with the family. Behavior change. (MI Interview 13—Internal collaborator, 2013) | And so our role in that was pulling together the Pacific Islander community and the Hispanic community to come in and test these materials. And we worked extremely closely with [collaborator] and the group that develops these materials with what we call master teachers. To say these are the concepts that we want people to know about. And she tied it into the state curriculum for health and science and national curriculum standards… (UT Interview 1—State genomics program staff, 2013) | Well, we are here because it’s helping, like [colleague] was saying, to change the social determinants of health. So being able to educate families about what they should know about their health history and sharing among themselves. And so they can know better what they can prevent or what they can do differently to actually stay healthy. (CT Interview 29—Community collaborator, 2014) |
| Education of Providers | But [the CDC is] funding the work we’ve done to try to identify early onset cancers that have a probable genetic component and alerting hospitals to that, those patients. And recently, alerting their physicians to make sure they get the counseling they need. (…) So I kind of like – and the other point is of course, that you’re really educating the physician. So the next patient that comes up that fits the criteria, they’ll get it right away. We don’t have to send out a note. Anyway, I just see it’s kind of like improving the whole healthcare delivery process. (MI Interview 8—Internal collaborator, 2013) | I haven’t looked at them for a long time but I think, doesn’t it just say “if you have a family history, your risk increases?” Just as basic as it can be? I think that’s probably enough information. And I think it’s enough to say—for them to trigger the conversation if they get to see a doctor or a diabetes educator or another health professional, saying “what is my increased risk?” But I think some people don’t even recognize that if they have a family history, they really don’t have to get diabetes. Or they really do have an increased risk. I think sometimes it’s meaningless information. (UT Interview 12— Internal collaborator, 2013) | The [Cambodian Survivor Health Assessment Tool] was developed in the early 1990s with funding from the Office of Minority Health. And Dr. [X], our doctor, was the head of that project. And basically it was done using a community based participatory approach. So we went over the stories, the general stories of trauma history, and we put together a questionnaire. The physical symptoms and stuff came from healthcare providers and we did a review of what generally went into a health questionnaire and into a family history. And then it was translated. (CT Interview 27—Community collaborator, 2015) |
| Policy Anticipation | And we can’t pay for genetic counseling because the Breast and Cervical Program doesn’t pay for that. The Breast and Cervical Program can’t pay for BRCA testing either. There’s been an enormous fight about whether Medicaid can pay for BRCA testing. Right now, they’ll do it on a case by case basis. That took some doing because before, they wouldn’t do it. So this is the trouble with being in poor America. You’ve got these fragmented services, you’ve got these half-baked services. (MI Interview 15—Internal collaborator in cancer, 2013) | We are not a state that has expanded Medicaid.
What we have quote expanded has been ridiculously small. So we have a
lot of people who are struggling to meet financial needs with their
healthcare. Maybe also a lack of education, I don’t know about
the general public and maybe some professional people too, about some of
the benefits of prevention and testing and early intervention. We have a
culture here that a lot of people believe more in holistic or denial
[ | Some other things that Michigan has done as far as working more closely and interacting with the payers, that was of great interest to us. [One genetics program staff] has said in the past, we just have to watch where the Affordable Care Act goes. Because then that may take care of that without having to spend money to be a sponsor at the annual insurance convention and provide, you know, a crystal award to everybody or something. (CT Interview 1—State genomics program staff, 2014) |