Center for Undiagnosed Diseases, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA.
J Genet Couns. 2022 Apr;31(2):326-337. doi: 10.1002/jgc4.1493. Epub 2021 Aug 10.
Genetic counselors (GCs) are increasingly filling important positions on research study teams, but there is limited literature describing the roles of GCs in these settings. GCs on the Undiagnosed Diseases Network (UDN) study team serve in a variety of roles across the research network and provide an opportunity to better understand genetic counselor roles in research. To quantitatively characterize the tasks regularly performed and professional fulfillment derived from these tasks, two surveys were administered to UDN GCs in a stepwise fashion. Responses from the first, free-response survey elicited the scope of tasks which informed development of a second structured, multiple-select survey. In survey 2, respondents were asked to select which roles they performed. Across 19 respondents, roles in survey 2 received a total of 947 selections averaging approximately 10 selections per role. When asked to indicate what roles they performed, respondent selected a mean of 50 roles (range 22-70). Survey 2 data were analyzed via thematic coding of responses and hierarchical cluster analysis to identify patterns in responses. From the thematic analysis, 20 non-overlapping codes emerged in seven categories: clinical interaction and care, communication, curation, leadership, participant management, research, and team management. Three themes emerged from the categories that represented the roles of GCs in the UDN: clinical care, collaboration, and curation. Cluster analyses showed that responses were more similar among individuals at the same institution than between institutions. This study highlights the ways GCs apply their unique skill set in the context of a clinical translational research network. Additionally, findings from this study reinforce the wide applicability of core skills that are part of genetic counseling training. Clinical literacy, genomics expertise and analysis, interpersonal, psychosocial and counseling skills, education, professional practice skills, and an understanding of research processes make genetic counselors well suited for such roles and poised to positively impact research experiences and outcomes for participants.
遗传咨询师(GCs)在研究团队中越来越多地担任重要职位,但关于 GCs 在这些环境中的角色的文献有限。在未确诊疾病网络(UDN)研究团队中的 GCs 在整个研究网络中担任各种角色,为更好地了解遗传咨询师在研究中的角色提供了机会。为了定量描述他们经常执行的任务和从这些任务中获得的专业成就感,分两个阶段向 UDN GCs 进行了两项调查。第一个自由回答调查的答复范围为第二个结构化多项选择调查的开发提供了信息。在调查 2 中,要求受访者选择他们所扮演的角色。在 19 名受访者中,调查 2 中的角色总共收到了 947 次选择,平均每个角色约有 10 次选择。当被要求指出他们扮演的角色时,受访者选择了 50 个角色(范围 22-70)。通过对响应的主题编码和层次聚类分析对调查 2 数据进行了分析,以识别响应中的模式。从主题分析中,出现了 7 个类别中的 20 个非重叠代码:临床互动和护理、沟通、策展、领导力、参与者管理、研究和团队管理。从这些类别中出现了 3 个主题,代表了 GCs 在 UDN 中的角色:临床护理、协作和策展。聚类分析表明,同一机构的个体之间的响应更为相似,而机构之间的响应则不相似。这项研究强调了 GCs 在临床转化研究网络环境中如何应用其独特技能的方式。此外,这项研究的结果还加强了作为遗传咨询培训一部分的核心技能的广泛适用性。临床素养、基因组学专业知识和分析、人际关系、心理社会和咨询技能、教育、专业实践技能以及对研究过程的理解使遗传咨询师非常适合担任这些角色,并有望积极影响参与者的研究体验和结果。