» Articles » PMID: 18023043

Psychiatric Genetic Testing: Attitudes and Intentions Among Future Users and Providers

Overview
Date 2007 Nov 21
PMID 18023043
Citations 24
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Psychiatric genetic research may eventually render possible psychiatric genetic testing. Whereas all genetic knowledge has certain characteristics raising ethical, legal, and social issues, psychiatric genetic knowledge adds more controversial issues. Ethical principles have been proposed as a guide in this field, but the optimal utilization of genetic testing has also been recognized to depend on knowledge of the potential consumers' attitudes. To provide knowledge to inform the public debate on mental illness and genetics, and the future conducting of psychiatric genetic testing and counseling, we surveyed attitudes toward psychiatric genetic testing among 397 patients with a psychiatric diagnosis, 164 of their relatives and 100 medical and psychology students. The results showed widespread interest in psychiatric genetic testing of self and child, but less support for prenatal testing. Psychiatric and somatic genetic testing attracted the same amounts of accept. General attitudes toward access to psychiatric genetic testing and information revealed substantial support for bioethical principles of autonomy and privacy. However, questions describing more specific situations revealed contradictions mirroring the bioethical dilemmas recognized in the field and variations in attitudes between groups with different levels of knowledge of genetics, different kinds of experience with mental illness, and different motives and preconceptions regarding psychiatric genetics. The contradictions and differences in attitudes among possible future users and providers of psychiatric genetic testing and counseling indicate ambivalence, insecurity, and perceived lack of knowledge in relation to psychiatric genetics. These results should inform further research and the future integration of psychiatric genetics into practice.

Citing Articles

A survey in Austria supports the significance of genetic counseling and pharmacogenetic testing for mental illness.

Aschauer E, Yazdi S, Aschauer H Front Psychiatry. 2024; 15:1436875.

PMID: 39421071 PMC: 11484073. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1436875.


Real-World Implementation of Precision Psychiatry: A Systematic Review of Barriers and Facilitators.

Baldwin H, Loebel-Davidsohn L, Oliver D, Salazar de Pablo G, Stahl D, Riper H Brain Sci. 2022; 12(7).

PMID: 35884740 PMC: 9313345. DOI: 10.3390/brainsci12070934.


Psychiatric polygenic risk scores: Child and adolescent psychiatrists' knowledge, attitudes, and experiences.

Pereira S, Munoz K, Small B, Soda T, Torgerson L, Sanchez C Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet. 2022; 189(7-8):293-302.

PMID: 35792502 PMC: 9444963. DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.b.32912.


Attitudes among parents of persons with autism spectrum disorder towards information about genetic risk and future health.

Johannessen J, Naerland T, Hope S, Torske T, Kaale A, Wirgenes K Eur J Hum Genet. 2021; 30(10):1138-1146.

PMID: 34776508 PMC: 9553933. DOI: 10.1038/s41431-021-00966-y.


PGx in psychiatry: Patients' knowledge, interest, and uncertainty management preferences in the context of pharmacogenomic testing.

Kastrinos A, Campbell-Salome G, Shelton S, Peterson E, Bylund C Patient Educ Couns. 2021; 104(4):732-738.

PMID: 33414028 PMC: 9620865. DOI: 10.1016/j.pec.2020.12.021.