London North Genomic Laboratory Hub, Great Ormond Street Hospital, London, UK.
UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, London, UK.
Eur J Hum Genet. 2020 Jul;28(7):896-906. doi: 10.1038/s41431-019-0564-5. Epub 2020 Jan 2.
Children and young people with rare and inherited diseases will be significant beneficiaries of genome sequencing. However, most educational resources are developed for adults. To address this gap in informational resources, we have co-designed, developed and evaluated an educational resource about genome sequencing for young people. The first animation explains what a genome is, genomic variation and genome sequencing ("My Genome Sequence": http://bit.ly/mygenomesequence), the second focuses on the limitations and uncertainties of genome sequencing ("My Genome Sequence part 2": http://bit.ly/mygenomesequence2). In total, 554 school pupils (11-15 years) took part in the quantitative evaluation. Mean objective knowledge increased from before to after watching one or both animations (4.24 vs 7.60 respectively; t = 32.16, p < 0.001). Self-rated awareness and understanding of the words 'genome' and 'genome sequencing' increased significantly after watching the animation. Most pupils felt they understood the benefits of sequencing after watching one (75.4%) or both animations (76.6%). Only 17.3% felt they understood the limitations and uncertainties after watching the first, however this was higher among those watching both (58.5%, p < 0.001). Twelve young people, 14 parents and 3 health professionals consenting in the 100,000 Genomes Project reported that the animation was clear and engaging, eased concerns about the process and empowered young people to take an active role in decision-making. To increase accessibility, subtitles in other languages could be added, and the script could be made available in a leaflet format for those that do not have internet access. Future research could focus on formally evaluating the animations in a clinical setting.
儿童和青少年罕见病和遗传病将是基因组测序的重要受益者。然而,大多数教育资源都是为成年人开发的。为了解决信息资源的这一差距,我们共同设计、开发和评估了一个针对年轻人的基因组测序教育资源。第一个动画解释了什么是基因组、基因组变异和基因组测序(“我的基因组序列”:http://bit.ly/mygenomesequence),第二个动画专注于基因组测序的局限性和不确定性(“我的基因组序列第 2 部分”:http://bit.ly/mygenomesequence2)。总共有 554 名中小学生(11-15 岁)参与了定量评估。观看一个或两个动画后,平均客观知识分别从 4.24 增加到 7.60(t=32.16,p<0.001)。观看动画后,自我评估对“基因组”和“基因组测序”这两个词的认识和理解显著提高。大多数学生表示,观看一个(75.4%)或两个动画(76.6%)后,他们理解了测序的好处。然而,只有 17.3%的人认为他们理解了第一个动画的局限性和不确定性,而观看两个动画的学生中,这一比例较高(58.5%,p<0.001)。在 10 万基因组计划中,有 12 名年轻人、14 名家长和 3 名健康专业人员同意,该动画清晰且引人入胜,减轻了对该过程的担忧,并使年轻人能够积极参与决策。为了提高可访问性,可以添加其他语言的字幕,并以传单的形式提供脚本,供那些没有互联网访问权限的人使用。未来的研究可以集中在临床试验中正式评估这些动画。