Department of Anthropology, Dartmouth College, 6047 Silsby, Hanover, NH, 03755, USA.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2020 Oct 19;20(1):630. doi: 10.1186/s12884-020-03203-4.
Non-invasive prenatal testing (NIPT) allows women to access genetic information about their fetuses without the physical risk inherent to prior testing methods. The advent of NIPT technology has led to concerns regarding the quality and process of informed consent, as a view of NIPT as "routine" could impair women's considered approach when choosing to undergo testing. Prior studies evaluating NIPT decision-making have focused on the clinical encounter as the primary environment for acquisition of biomedical information and decision formation. While important, this conceptualization fails to consider how additional sources of knowledge, including embodied and empathetic experiential knowledge, shape perceptions of risk and the societal use of NIPT.
In order to address this issue, qualitative, semi-structured interviews with 25 women who had been offered NIPT were performed. Participants came from a well-resourced, rural setting near a major academic medical center in the US. Women were categorized by NIPT use/non-use as well as whether their described decision-making process was perceived as making a significant decision requiring contemplation ("significant") versus a rapid or immediate decision ("routinized"). A constructivist general inductive approach was used to explore themes in the data, develop a framework of NIPT decision-making, and compare the perceptions of women with differential decision-making processes and outcomes.
A framework for decision-making regarding NIPT was developed based on three emergent factors: perceptions of the societal use of NIPT, expected emotional impact of genetic information, and perceived utility of genetic information. Analysis revealed that perceptions of widespread use of NIPT, pervasive societal narratives of NIPT use as "forward-thinking," and a perception of information as anxiety-relieving contributed to routinized uptake of NIPT. In contrast, women who displayed a lack of routinization expressed fewer stereotypes regarding the audience for NIPT and relied on communication with their social networks to consider how they might use the information provided by NIPT.
The findings of this study reveal the societal narratives and perceptions that shape differential decision-making regarding NIPT in the U.S.
Understanding and addressing these perceptions that influence NIPT decision-making, especially routinized uptake of NIPT, is important as the use and scope of this technology increases.
无创产前检测(NIPT)使女性能够获取有关胎儿的遗传信息,而无需承受先前检测方法所固有的身体风险。NIPT 技术的出现引发了对知情同意质量和过程的担忧,因为将 NIPT 视为“常规”可能会影响女性在选择接受检测时的深思熟虑的方法。先前评估 NIPT 决策的研究侧重于将临床接触作为获取生物医学信息和形成决策的主要环境。虽然这很重要,但这种概念化未能考虑到其他知识来源,包括体现和同理心经验知识,如何塑造对风险的感知以及社会对 NIPT 的使用。
为了解决这个问题,对 25 名接受过 NIPT 检测的女性进行了定性、半结构化访谈。参与者来自美国一家主要学术医疗中心附近资源丰富的农村地区。根据 NIPT 的使用/不使用情况以及她们描述的决策过程是被认为是需要深思熟虑的重大决策(“重大”)还是快速或即时决策(“常规”),对女性进行了分类。采用建构主义一般归纳方法来探讨数据中的主题,构建 NIPT 决策框架,并比较具有不同决策过程和结果的女性的看法。
根据三个新出现的因素,制定了 NIPT 决策框架:对 NIPT 社会用途的看法、遗传信息预期情绪影响以及遗传信息的预期效用。分析表明,对 NIPT 广泛使用的看法、NIPT 使用的普遍社会叙事为“前瞻性思维”,以及对信息的缓解焦虑作用,促成了 NIPT 的常规采用。相比之下,表现出缺乏常规化的女性对 NIPT 的受众表现出较少的刻板印象,并依靠与社交网络的沟通来考虑如何使用 NIPT 提供的信息。
这项研究的结果揭示了影响美国 NIPT 决策的社会叙事和看法。
了解和解决这些影响 NIPT 决策的看法,特别是 NIPT 的常规采用,很重要,因为这项技术的使用和范围正在扩大。