Author: Mann, Caitlin; Goodhue, Brighton; Guillard, Arianna; Slamon, Jill; Newman, Randa; Zhao, Zhiguo; Ding, Tan; Petrelli, Gianna; Dudek, Martha
Title: The COVIDâ€19 pandemic and reproductive genetic counseling: Changes in access and service delivery at an academic medical center in the United States Cord-id: 7xgn6emn Document date: 2021_7_5
ID: 7xgn6emn
Snippet: The COVIDâ€19 pandemic widely disrupted the delivery of healthcare services, including genetic counseling. To ensure continuity of care, the reproductive genetic counselors at a large academic medical center in the United States rapidly transitioned their practice from 90% inâ€person patient consultations to a predominantly telehealth model. The present study describes this transition in regard to patient access to genetic counseling and genetic screening. A chart review of patients seen by th
Document: The COVIDâ€19 pandemic widely disrupted the delivery of healthcare services, including genetic counseling. To ensure continuity of care, the reproductive genetic counselors at a large academic medical center in the United States rapidly transitioned their practice from 90% inâ€person patient consultations to a predominantly telehealth model. The present study describes this transition in regard to patient access to genetic counseling and genetic screening. A chart review of patients seen by the reproductive genetic counselors from January 2020 to August 2020 was completed. The time frame included the three months prior to the COVIDâ€19 pandemic and the first five months during COVIDâ€19. Patient demographics and clinical and appointment data were compared between the preâ€COVIDâ€19 and duringâ€COVIDâ€19 timeframes. Overall, 88.6% of patients were seen via telehealth during COVIDâ€19 and there was no significant difference based upon patient age (p = .20), indication for appointment (p = .06), or gestational age (p = .06). However, nonâ€English speaking patients were more often seen inâ€person than by telehealth (p < .001), and more patients residing farther from the clinic were seen via telehealth (p = .004). Duringâ€COVIDâ€19 results for prenatal cellâ€free DNA screening and expanded carrier screening were delayed (p < .001). Additionally, after consenting to screening, patients seen during COVIDâ€19 were more likely to not complete a sample collection for their intended screening when compared to those seen preâ€COVIDâ€19 (OR = 6.15, 95% CI = 1.43–26.70, p = .015). Overall, this study supports that access to genetic counseling services and genetic screening can be maintained during a global pandemic like COVIDâ€19. Genetic counselors are wellâ€equipped to pivot swiftly during challenging times; however, they must continue to work to address other barriers to accessing genetic services, especially for nonâ€English speaking populations. Future studies are needed to pose solutions to the obstacles confronted in this service delivery model during a global pandemic.
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