Disclosure and comfort during genetic counseling sessions with LGBTQ+ patients: An updated assessment

Author:

Valentine Rozalia1,Mills Rachel1ORCID,Nichols Tracy2,Doyle Lauren1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MS Genetic Counseling Program University of North Carolina at Greensboro Greensboro North Carolina USA

2. Department of Public Health Education University of North Carolina at Greensboro Greensboro North Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractDisclosure is the act of sharing a stigmatized identity, and members of the LGBTQ+ community make decisions related to disclosure multiple times throughout their life. Disclosure in medical settings can impact perceptions of care and outcomes for LGBTQ+ patients; however, little is understood about the process of decision‐making regarding disclosure in the genetic counseling setting. As such, this study aimed to explore LGBTQ+ experiences in genetic counseling sessions and their disclosure behaviors. Fifty‐five LGBTQ+ individuals who attended a genetic counseling session and 91 genetic counselors completed online surveys. The patient survey assessed for disclosure behaviors, experiences of discrimination, and comfort in genetic counseling sessions. The counselor survey evaluated comfort with the LGBTQ+ population in a counseling setting, whether counselors facilitate disclosure in sessions, and whether counseling is tailored for the LGBTQ+ population. Eighty‐two percent of genetic counselors “rarely” or “never” ask about sexual orientation, and 69% “rarely” or “never” ask about gender identity. The majority of patients indicated they were not asked about their sexual orientation (87%) or gender identity (80%). Some patients reported experiencing discrimination or homo/transphobia in their genetic counseling sessions, with 6.12% of LGBQ+ patients experiencing discrimination and 24.1% of trans+ patients reporting discrimination. Over half of genetic counselors reported receiving training in LGBTQ+ healthcare and the majority reported comfort with providing care to LGBTQ+ patients. However, discrepancies between patient‐reported experiences and genetic counselors' descriptions of their care for the LGBTQ+ population warrant further research and suggest additional training or changes in practice may be necessary.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical)

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