The social value of genomic sequencing for disadvantaged families facing rare disease

This study explores parental expectations and value-making processes in respect to pediatric clinical genomic sequencing for socially disadvantaged families. Drawing on interviews and ethnographic observations with parents of children with undiagnosed physical and/or intellectual differences seeking...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2022-12, Vol.314, p.115465-115465, Article 115465
Hauptverfasser: Outram, SM, Brown, JEH, Ackerman, SL
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study explores parental expectations and value-making processes in respect to pediatric clinical genomic sequencing for socially disadvantaged families. Drawing on interviews and ethnographic observations with parents of children with undiagnosed physical and/or intellectual differences seeking to find whether these differences have a genetic etiology, we explore expectations and parental assessments of the value of genomic sequencing within the context of an ongoing research study. We demonstrate how the value of sequencing to parents goes well beyond finding diagnostic results or receiving prescriptive guidance as to the best care and treatment of their child; instead, value is co-created by parents, clinicians, and genetic counsellors throughout the enrollment and return of results process. Parents in our study found that clinicians and genetic counsellors repeatedly reenforce that parents need to lower their expectations and be prepared to wait for genetic science to provide more definitive answers. At the same time, parents experience that clinical teams validate parents for having made a good choice in their undertaking of genomic sequencing and, no matter the result, that they are not to blame for their child's symptoms. The experience of many parents (although not all) is that genomic science reduces or removes their sense of guilt for their child's condition, providing a platform that affirms them as “good parents.” Moreover, rather than being voiceless and isolated, socially disadvantaged parents who enter into diagnostic sequencing find themselves in a familial-biosocial framework wherein they are co-partners in a socially and biologically authoritative vision of the future. •Parents are mostly resigned and prepared to wait for future advancements in genomic science.•Parents and clinicians co-create prognostic hopes and social values in respect to pediatric genomic sequencing.•The pursuit of pediatric genomic sequencing can empower underrepresented parents who otherwise struggle in silence.•Through pediatric genomic sequencing, parents can become partners in an authoritative vision of the future.
ISSN:0277-9536
1873-5347
DOI:10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115465