AI Article Synopsis

  • DTC genetic testing offers accessible health info but raises concerns about regulation, clinical usefulness, and potential harm.
  • A study surveyed public opinions on DTCGT in the US, UK, Japan, and Australia to understand awareness, risk perceptions, and intended behaviors regarding these tests.
  • Results indicated low awareness and purchasing intent, especially in Japan; preferences for local purchases and doctor-involved results were highlighted, necessitating further cross-cultural analysis.

Article Abstract

While direct to consumer health-related genetic testing (DTCGT) has potential to provide accessible genetic information and empower individuals to make informed healthcare decisions, it attracts concern associated with regulatory gaps, clinical utility and potential for harm. Understanding public reactions to DTCGT is vital to facilitate considered regulatory, health care and consumer protection strategies. Yet little is known, particularly outside the dominant US market, about how the general public view and might engage with DTCGT outside traditional health care systems. This paper addresses this knowledge gap with the first empirical study to investigate general public views across four countries, each at different stages of market development. US (n = 1000), UK (n = 1014), Japanese (n = 1018) and Australian (n = 1000) respondents completed an online experimental survey assessing comprehension, risk perceptions, and potential psychological and behavioural outcomes by type of test (disease pre-disposition and drug sensitivity), severity, lifestyle factors, and family history. Results showed generally low awareness and intention to purchase across countries, highest in the US and lowest in Japan. Results also showed clear preference for within-country purchases (less in Japan), with reports returned via doctors far more important in Japan. All respondents were more likely to act on test results, where there was higher genetic or lifestyle risk of developing a disease. Statistical comparisons of demographic and health-related variables across countries point to the need for further analyses designed to explain much needed cross-cultural, cross-health care system and developed versus developing market differences.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7029038PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41431-019-0529-8DOI Listing

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