Ake Jeriel F, Lin Jielu, Wilkinson Anna V, Koehly Laura M
University of Maryland School of Public Health, College Park, MD, United States.
National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States.
Prev Med Rep. 2021 Apr 19;22:101384. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2021.101384. eCollection 2021 Jun.
Family history of metabolic conditions is a primary factor for clinicians to consider when administering preventive care. Sharing this information with healthcare providers proactively is therefore important to individual health outcomes. This brief report seeks to identify factors associated with sharing family history with healthcare providers in individuals of Mexican heritage. Data were obtained from a health education intervention study conducted during 2008-2010, which recruited 497 adult participants from 162 multigenerational households in Houston, Texas to receive family history-based risk feedback generated by Family Healthware™. Households were randomized to receive a pedigree of metabolic conditions or a pedigree coupled with supplementary information about one's personalized risk assessment and behavioral recommendations. Participants completed two follow-up surveys at three and ten months post intervention, respectively. Analysis based on 296 participants from 147 households who read but did not share their feedback at three-month follow-up suggests benefits of providing personalized risk assessment and tailored behavioral recommendations in addition to a simple pedigree. Participants receiving supplementary risk feedback are more likely to share it with family members at three-month follow-up, which is associated with increased sharing and willingness to share risk feedback with healthcare providers at ten-month follow-up. The findings highlight the importance of family relationships in medical information disclosure in Mexican American adults. Future interventions should capitalize on family relationships in health education and promotion programs for optimal prevention of metabolic conditions in at-risk populations.
代谢性疾病家族史是临床医生在提供预防性护理时需要考虑的首要因素。因此,主动与医疗服务提供者分享这些信息对个人健康结果很重要。本简短报告旨在确定与墨西哥裔个体向医疗服务提供者分享家族史相关的因素。数据来自2008年至2010年期间进行的一项健康教育干预研究,该研究从得克萨斯州休斯顿的162个多代家庭中招募了497名成年参与者,以接收由家庭健康软件(Family Healthware™)生成的基于家族史的风险反馈。家庭被随机分配接受代谢性疾病谱系图或附有个人个性化风险评估和行为建议补充信息的谱系图。参与者分别在干预后三个月和十个月完成了两次随访调查。基于147个家庭的296名参与者的分析表明,在三个月随访时阅读但未分享反馈的参与者中,除了简单的谱系图外,提供个性化风险评估和量身定制的行为建议是有益的。在三个月随访时,接受补充风险反馈的参与者更有可能与家庭成员分享,这与在十个月随访时增加与医疗服务提供者分享风险反馈的意愿相关。研究结果突出了家庭关系在墨西哥裔美国成年人医疗信息披露中的重要性。未来的干预措施应在健康教育和促进项目中利用家庭关系,以最佳方式预防高危人群的代谢性疾病。