Facilitating the Genetic Counseling Process Practice-Based Skills, Second Edition

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  • Understand that how you provide risk information has a significant impact on
    patient interpretations of its meaning. “Informing an individual that he or she has a
    chance of a particular occurrence of 1.3 in 10,000 compared to the general popula-
    tion’s chance of 1 in 10,000 is not particularly impressive to most people. However,
    if the format was such that the individual was informed that his or her risk is 30%
    greater than that of the average individual, the situation is likely to be seen as
    ‘riskier,’ although the two situations are equivalent” (Bottorff et al. 1998 , p. 70).
    Point out that while population frequencies contribute to estimating their personal
    risk, they are not the “whole story” for the patient (O’Doherty and Suthers 2007 ).

  • Emphasize that risks are probabilities, not guarantees (O’Doherty and Suthers
    2007 ). Try to help patients understand the uncertainties involved.

  • Be aware, as we’ve stressed in this chapter, that it is very difficult to communi-
    cate objective risk to patients (Sivell et al. 2008 ). Bottorff et al. ( 1998 ) offer an
    illuminating example: “Providing risk information about cancer to individuals
    who may perceive themselves to be healthy, and who may or may not have
    directly observed a close relative with the disease, requires these individuals to
    engage in sophisticated abstract thinking. This issue becomes more pronounced
    in situations where there is not effective therapy available or the information is
    only relevant in considerations of possible future outcomes” (p. 69).

  • Assess patient reaction to risk information. Austin ( 2010 ) and Sagi et al. ( 1998 )
    point out that risk perception is not equivalent to probability. As mentioned ear-
    lier, risk perception actually involves both probability and adversity (or burden
    of an outcome). So, one of your challenges is to assess how adverse a particular
    outcome would be for your patient and to associate that adversity with the prob-
    ability of the outcome occurring. Try working with your patient to identify all
    short-term and long-range consequences of a particular outcome (medical, psy-
    chosocial, financial, lifestyle, etc.) and its relative importance or likely impact
    (O’Doherty and Suthers 2007 ).

  • Ask patients to summarize their understanding of their risk after you have given
    them the information (e.g., “What is your understanding of the risk we’ve just
    discussed?”). This will allow you to correct any inaccuracies and will provide
    insight into their subjective perceptions of risk.

  • Explore patient feelings about their personal risk. Emotions may include fear,
    anger, guilt, grief, shame, embarrassment, and lowered self-esteem (Bottorff
    et al. 1998 ) and may include “difficulties confronting perceived lack of control
    and seemingly irrevocable fate, desires to frame genetic information positively in
    order to avoid despair and helplessness and seek hope, and efforts to reduce anxi-
    ety by finding order in the face of fate and seeming randomness” (Klitzman
    2010 , p. 445). Try an empathy response in which you reflect your patient’s feel-
    ings. For example, “You’ve gotten very quiet since I gave you the information
    about your risk. Are you feeling scared right now?” Be tentative with your empa-
    thy as Klitzman ( 2010 ) noted, “Given that emotional conflicts may not be fully
    conscious, providers should proceed very carefully in addressing them” (p. 445).


7.1 Communicating Information

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