| Literature DB >> 32066398 |
Junko Yotsumoto1, Akihiko Sekizawa2, Satomi Inoue3, Nobuhiro Suzumori4, Osamu Samura5, Takahiro Yamada6, Kiyonori Miura7, Hideaki Masuzaki7, Hideaki Sawai8, Jun Murotsuki9, Haruka Hamanoue10, Yoshimasa Kamei11, Toshiaki Endo12, Akimune Fukushima13, Yukiko Katagiri14, Naoki Takeshita14, Masaki Ogawa15, Haruki Nishizawa16, Yoko Okamoto17, Shinya Tairaku18, Takashi Kaji19, Kazuhisa Maeda20, Keiichi Matsubara21, Masanobu Ogawa22, Hisao Osada23, Takashi Ohba24, Yukie Kawano25, Aiko Sasaki26, Haruhiko Sago26.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Women who receive negative results from non-invasive prenatal genetic testing (NIPT) may find that they later have mixed or ambivalent feelings, for example, feelings of accepting NIPT and regretting undergoing the test. This study aimed to investigate the factors generating ambivalent feelings among women who gave birth after having received negative results from NIPT.Entities:
Keywords: Ambivalence; Anticipatory anxiety; Content analysis; Genetic counseling; NIPT
Year: 2020 PMID: 32066398 PMCID: PMC7027219 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-020-2763-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Fig. 1Flowchart of the respondent selection
Factors associated with ambivalence
| Primary category | Subcategory | Mid-level category | Lowest category |
|---|---|---|---|
| Factors related to genetic counseling ( | |||
| Lack of information (159) | |||
| Inadequate support by medical staff up to taking NIPT (69) | |||
| Lack of neutrality in genetic counseling ( | |||
| Lack of NIPT information from family physician before genetic counseling ( | |||
| Family physician’s response ( | |||
| Lack of information in case of positive result ( | |||
| if the pregnancy was terminated ( | |||
| if the pregnancy was continued ( | |||
| follow-up support to positive result ( | |||
| Lack of psychological care adapted to individual needs ( | |||
| Lack of psychological care at genetic counseling ( | |||
| Lack of genetic counseling at the appropriate moment ( | |||
| Environmental factors (82) | |||
| Lack of awareness and education about diversity ( | |||
| Insecurities on raising the child ( | |||
| Insecurities for the future ( | |||
| After the parents’ death ( | |||
| Impact on the siblings ( | |||
| Vague insecurity ( | |||
| Insecurities for the child-rearing environment ( | |||
| Familiarity with challenges of living with disabled person ( | |||
| Lack of social support systems for people with disabilities ( | |||
| Increased anticipatory anxiety ( | |||
| Time related anxiety ( | |||
| Anxiety about test accuracy ( | |||
Footnote: n Number of occurrences of each category. Categories may partially overlap
Fig. 2The relationship between women’s ambivalent emotions and their factors
Fig. 3Components of the ambivalence