Perceived social support: A study of genetic counseling graduate students in the United States (US) and Canada

Author:

Clark Sierra1ORCID,Kennel Victoria2,McBrien Sarah2,Samson Kaeli3,Zimmerman Holly4

Affiliation:

1. Munroe Meyer Institute University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha Nebraska USA

2. College of Allied Health Professions University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha Nebraska USA

3. Department of Biostatistics University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha Nebraska USA

4. Genetic Counseling Program University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha Nebraska USA

Abstract

AbstractSocial support is described as having positive psychological and physical outcomes and offers some protective benefits against mental illness. However, research has not addressed social support for genetic counseling graduate students, although this population is prone to elevated levels of stress in addition to field‐specific phenomena like compassion fatigue and burnout. Therefore, an online survey was distributed to genetic counseling students in accredited programs in the United States and Canada to synthesize information about (1) demographic information, (2) self‐identified sources of support, and (3) the availability of a strong support network. In total, 238 responses were included in the analysis, yielding a mean social support score of 3.84 on a 5‐point scale, where higher scores indicate increased social support. The identification of friends or classmates as forms of social support significantly increased social support scores (p < 0.001; p = 0.006, respectively). There was also a positive correlation between increased social support scores and the number of social support outlets (p = 0.01). Subgroup analysis focused on potential differences in social support for racially/ethnically underrepresented participants (comprising less than 22% of respondents), revealing that this population identified friends as a form of social support significantly less often than their White counterparts; and mean social support scores were also significantly lower. Our study underscores the importance of classmates as a source of social support for genetic counseling graduate students while uncovering discrepancies that exist in social support sources between White and underrepresented students. Ultimately, stakeholders in genetic counseling student success should foster a community and culture of support within a training program (whether traditionally in‐person or online) to encourage success among all students.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical)

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