Publications
General practitioners' views on genomics, practice and education: A qualitative interview study
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Genomics is moving rapidly into mainstream medicine through clinical genomic testing and consumer-initiated online DNA testing. The aim of this study was to identify Australian general practitioners' (GPs') views on genomics, impact on practice and educational needs to inform continuing education. METHOD: Semi-structured interviews were conducted, with constant comparative inductive analysis and governance from a national taskforce. RESULTS: Twenty-eight GPs (43% female) were interviewed; 71% worked in a metropolitan workplace. Most initially reported little experience with genetic/genomic tests but, when prompted, recognised encountering genomics, mainly non-invasive prenatal and single-gene tests. Many GPs referred patients for cancer screening to genetic services or specialists. GPs reported needing continuing education and resources, with preferences underpinned by relevance to practice. DISCUSSION: GPs are integrating genomic testing into care, mainly through prenatal screening, and anticipate further impact. They want diverse and context-dependent education but are unaware of some available resources, such as The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners' Genomics in general practice guideline.
Type | Journal |
---|---|
ISBN | 2208-7958 (Electronic) |
Authors | Cusack, M. B.; Hickerton, C.; Nisselle, A.; McClaren, B.; Terrill, B.; Gaff, C.; Dunlop, K.; Metcalfe, S. |
Publisher Name | Australian Journal of General Practice |
Published Date | 2021-10-31 |
Published Volume | 50 |
Published Issue | 10 |
Published Pages | 747-752 |
Status | Published in-print |
DOI | 10.31128/AJGP-05-20-5448 |
URL link to publisher's version | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34590089 |