Financial constraints on genetic counseling and further risk-management decisions among U.S. women at elevated breast cancer risk.
Rachel J MeadowsTasleem J PadamseePublished in: Journal of genetic counseling (2021)
Clinical guidelines recommend that women at high risk of breast cancer should consider various risk-management options, which remain widely underutilized. We conducted semi-structured, qualitative interviews with 50 high-risk women to understand how financial constraints affect use of genetic counseling, genetic testing, and further risk-management decisions. Inductive analyses revealed three categories of health-related financial constraint: (a) lack of insurance, (b) underinsurance, and (c) other financial constraints (e.g., medical debt, raising children, managing comorbidities). Various breast cancer risk-management actions were limited by these financial constraints, including genetic counseling, genetic testing, enhanced screening, and prophylactic surgeries. Women's narratives also identified complex relationships between financial constraint and perceptions of healthcare providers and insurance companies, particularly as related to bias, price transparency, and potential genetic discrimination. Results from this study have implications for further research and expansion of genetic counseling services delivery to more economically and racially diverse women.
Keyphrases
- breast cancer risk
- healthcare
- affordable care act
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- genome wide
- smoking cessation
- primary care
- copy number
- pregnancy outcomes
- childhood cancer
- young adults
- type diabetes
- cervical cancer screening
- adipose tissue
- systematic review
- dna methylation
- hiv testing
- metabolic syndrome
- hepatitis c virus
- risk assessment
- gene expression
- clinical practice
- hiv infected
- climate change