Community attitudes to genetic susceptibility-based mental health interventions for healthy people in a large national sample

2011 
Abstract Background Despite an apparent high interest in predictive genetic testing for common multifactorial disorders, few data describe anticipated health behaviour as a consequence of such testing. Methods A large population-based public survey with community dwelling adults (N = 1046) ascertained through random digit dialling. Attitudes were assessed via structured interviews. Results Intention to start therapies or courses to learn to develop better strategies to cope with stress (80%) was significantly and positively associated with self-estimation of risk for major depressive disorder as higher than average (s = 0.12, p = 0.001); endorsement of family environment as a causal attribution (s = 0.11, p  Limitations The hypothetical nature of the genetic risk scenario may have weakened participants' sensitivity to the potential personal impact of such a genetic test result. Conclusions Perceptions that modifiable environmental factors strongly contribute to overall risk of major depressive disorder appeared to drive willingness to engage in risk-modifying interventions in the hypothetical scenario of a genetic predisposition. Our results suggest that screening for genetic risk in consort with environmental risk factor assessment has potential community acceptability and clinical value as an early intervention and preventive tool for high risk groups.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    27
    References
    9
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []