Counselling following the Prenatal Diagnosis of Klinefelter Syndrome: Comparisons between Geneticists and Obstetricians in Five European Countries

Objective: To describe and compare the information obstetricians and geneticists in five European countries report they would give following the prenatal diagnosis of Klinefelter syndrome. Methods: 388 obstetricians and 269 geneticists from Germany, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain and the UK comple...

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Veröffentlicht in:Community genetics 2001, Vol.4 (4), p.233-238
Hauptverfasser: Hall, Sue, Marteau, Theresa M., Limbert, Caroline, Reid, Margaret, Feijóo, Maria, Soares, Maria, Nippert, Irma, Bobrow, Martin, Cameron, Alan, van Diem, Mariet, Verschuuren-Bemelmans, Corien, Eiben, Bernd, García-Miñaur, Sixto, Walkinshaw, Stephen, Soothill, Peter, de Vigan, Catherine, McIntosh, Karen, Kirwan, Donna
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: To describe and compare the information obstetricians and geneticists in five European countries report they would give following the prenatal diagnosis of Klinefelter syndrome. Methods: 388 obstetricians and 269 geneticists from Germany, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain and the UK completed a brief questionnaire assessing two variables: the information they reported providing to parents following the prenatal diagnosis of Klinefelter syndrome (categorized as positive or negative); and their perceptions of the quality of life with the condition. Results: Geneticists were more likely than obstetricians to report providing more positive than negative information about Klinefelter syndrome than equal amounts of positive and negative information or more negative than positive information about the condition (excess positive information). Regardless of specialty, the information that health professionals reported providing was predicted by their perceptions of the quality of life with the condition, and the country from which they came. Those perceiving quality of life as greater were more likely to provide an excess positive information, as were health professionals from Germany and the UK. Conclusions: These results suggest that the information parents across Europe receive after the prenatal diagnosis of Klinefelter syndrome varies according to the specialty and country of the health professionals consulted, and their perceptions of quality of life with the condition. This variation seems to reflect personal, cultural and professional differences between health professionals.
ISSN:1422-2795
1662-4246
1422-2833
1662-8063
DOI:10.1159/000064198