Abstract
Advances in genomics often lead healthcare professionals (HCPs) to learn new information, e.g., about reinterpreted variants that could have clinical significance for patients seen previously. A question arises of whether HCPs should recontact these former patients. We present some findings interrogating the views of patients (or parents of patients) with a rare or undiagnosed condition about how such recontacting might be organised ethically and practically. Forty-one interviews were analysed thematically. Participants suggested a 'joint venture' model in which efforts to recontact are shared with HCPs. Some proposed an ICT-approach involving an electronic health record that automatically alerts them to potentially relevant updates. The need for rigorous privacy controls and transparency about who could access their data was emphasised. Importantly, these findings highlight that the lack of clarity about recontacting is a symptom of a wider problem: the lack of necessary infrastructure to pool genomic data responsibly, to aggregate it with other health data, and to enable patients/parents to receive updates. We hope that our findings will instigate a debate about the way responsibilities for recontacting under any joint venture model could be allocated, as well as the limitations and normative implications of using ICT as a solution to this intractable problem. As a first step to delineating responsibilities in the clinical setting, we suggest HCPs should routinely discuss recontacting with patients/parents, including the new information that should trigger a HCP to initiate recontact, as part of the consent process for genetic testing.
Highlights
Advances in genomics can lead healthcare professionals (HCPs) to realise that they hold clinically relevant information about patients seen in clinic previously
They thought any model of recontacting would have to be a joint venture, whereby patients/parents and HCPs share the efforts involved. Our findings echo those from a study by Townsend et al (2012), in which participants (HCPs, parents of children who had undergone genetic testing, and members of the public) thought that patients/parents were responsible for contacting HCPs to check for genomic developments
The findings align with our recent recommendation advocating a model of shared responsibility, with a suggestion that HCPs should routinely discuss recontacting with patients/parents, including issues that might trigger it, in the context of consent for genetic testing (Carrieri et al, 2017b)
Summary
Advances in genomics can lead healthcare professionals (HCPs) to realise that they hold clinically relevant information about patients seen in clinic previously. S. Dheensa et al / European Journal of Medical Genetics 60 (2017) 403e409 patients/parents to contact them at regular intervals, which would trigger a check for updates. Other HCPs argued that patients/parents would not always have the understanding, organisational skills, or time to recontact and that their decisions not to request updates would sometimes be uninformed, so placing responsibility on them would be practically and ethically problematic. It is unclear what patients'/ parents’ views are about recontacting. This paper explores their views, about the way recontacting might be organised in an ethically sound and practical way
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