2021
DOI: 10.1002/jgc4.1532
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Assessing the acceptability, feasibility, and usefulness of a psychosocial screening tool to patients and clinicians in a clinical genetics service in Australia

Abstract: Increasing demand for clinical genetic services may impact the resources and quality of genetic counseling, potentially impacting patient outcomes. Using a psychosocial screening tool may aid the provision of genetic counseling by reliably identifying patients' psychosocial needs. The Genetic Psychosocial Risk Instrument (GPRI) is a validated genetic-specific screening tool designed to identify psychological risk factors that predict distress in patients having genetic testing. This questionnaire-based study i… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…This includes building a strong relationship with patients to improve patients' understanding of health information and a better ability to adapt to this information which aligns with seminal genetic counseling training and literature (Arnold, 2014;Coulehan et al, 2001;McCarthy Veach et al, 2007;Myers, 2000;Rogers, 1975). The Australian study by Monohan et al (2022) describes the use of a psychosocial screening tool, the Genetic Psychosocial Risk Instrument (GPRI), to improve patient outcomes and aid genetic counseling practice. The GPRI was found to be highly acceptable by patients and clinicians.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This includes building a strong relationship with patients to improve patients' understanding of health information and a better ability to adapt to this information which aligns with seminal genetic counseling training and literature (Arnold, 2014;Coulehan et al, 2001;McCarthy Veach et al, 2007;Myers, 2000;Rogers, 1975). The Australian study by Monohan et al (2022) describes the use of a psychosocial screening tool, the Genetic Psychosocial Risk Instrument (GPRI), to improve patient outcomes and aid genetic counseling practice. The GPRI was found to be highly acceptable by patients and clinicians.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Australian study by Monohan et al (2022) describes the use of a psychosocial screening tool, the Genetic Psychosocial Risk Instrument (GPRI), to improve patient outcomes and aid genetic counseling practice. The GPRI was found to be highly acceptable by patients and clinicians.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%