| Literature DB >> 31448412 |
Allyn McConkie-Rosell1, Kelly Schoch1, Jennifer Sullivan1, Heidi Cope1, Rebecca Spillmann1, Christina G S Palmer2, Loren Pena3, Yong-Hui Jiang1, Nicole Daniels1, Nicole Walley1, Khoon G Tan1, Stephen R Hooper4, Vandana Shashi1.
Abstract
While genomic sequencing (ES/GS) has the potential to diagnose children with difficult to diagnose phenotypes, the goal should be not only a diagnosis, but also to empower parents to seek next steps for their children and to emotionally manage the outcome, whether or not a diagnosis is secured. To help achieve this goal, objective measures are needed to assess the process of parental empowerment related to genome sequencing. We present the validity and reliability of the Genome Empowerment Scale (GEmS), developed using a healthcare empowerment theoretical model. To evaluate its psychometric properties, 158 parents of 117 children with an undiagnosed condition undergoing genomic sequencing completed the GEmS, measures for criterion validity and for depression and anxiety. Factor analysis resulted in a four factor solution: (a) meaning of a diagnosis; (b) emotional management of the process; (c) seeking information and support and (d) implications and planning. Reliability and validity analyses show that the GEmS has good psychometric properties. The inter-relationships among the factors revealed a profile that may identify parents at risk for a poorer outcome who may benefit from targeted genetic counseling. The GEmS, an objective measure of parental genomic empowerment, can be utilized for future research and translational applications.Entities:
Keywords: genetic counseling; genomic sequencing; healthcare empowerment; parental perspectives; rare disorders; undiagnosed disorders
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31448412 PMCID: PMC6983919 DOI: 10.1111/cge.13635
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Genet ISSN: 0009-9163 Impact factor: 4.438