School of Psychology, Birkbeck, University of London, UK.
J Health Psychol. 2002 Mar;7(2):131-44. doi: 10.1177/1359105302007002398.
This study is concerned with how candidates for pre-symptomatic genetic testing for Huntington's disease represent their risk status and how they describe the process involved in their deciding whether or not to take the test. Transcripts of semi-structured interviews with five women offered testing were analysed by interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA). The women find it difficult to conceptualize their current risk, and express reasons for a perceived enhanced or diminished risk based on, for example, number of previous family members affected or pre-selection of a likely recipient of the genetic mutation. The article then illustrates the contextual factors, such as family discussion or a key triggering event, which can influence the decision process of whether or not to take the genetic test. The study has implications both for psychological models of decision making and for the practice of genetic counselling.
本研究关注的是亨廷顿病前基因检测候选人如何表达他们的风险状况,以及他们如何描述决定是否接受检测的过程。通过解释现象学分析(IPA)对 5 名接受检测的女性的半结构化访谈记录进行了分析。这些女性发现很难概念化她们目前的风险,并根据以前受影响的家庭成员数量或基因突变的可能接受者的预先选择等因素,表达对感知到的风险增加或降低的原因。然后,本文说明了影响决策过程的情境因素,例如家庭讨论或关键触发事件,这些因素可能会影响是否接受基因检测的决定。该研究对决策的心理模型和遗传咨询的实践都有影响。