Factors Motivating Individuals to Consider Genetic Testing for Type 2 Diabetes Risk Prediction.

The purpose of this study was to identify attitudes and perceptions of willingness to participate in genetic testing for type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk prediction in the general population. Adults (n = 598) were surveyed on attitudes about utilizing genetic testing to predict future risk of T2D. Partici...

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Main Authors: Jennifer Wessel, Jyoti Gupta, Mary de Groot
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4720283?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-6caae2e9609044f7b0b257dd78f4d45b2020-11-24T21:32:22ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01111e014707110.1371/journal.pone.0147071Factors Motivating Individuals to Consider Genetic Testing for Type 2 Diabetes Risk Prediction.Jennifer WesselJyoti GuptaMary de GrootThe purpose of this study was to identify attitudes and perceptions of willingness to participate in genetic testing for type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk prediction in the general population. Adults (n = 598) were surveyed on attitudes about utilizing genetic testing to predict future risk of T2D. Participants were recruited from public libraries (53%), online registry (37%) and a safety net hospital emergency department (10%). Respondents were 37 ± 11 years old, primarily White (54%), female (69%), college educated (46%), with an annual income ≥$25,000 (56%). Half of participants were interested in genetic testing for T2D (52%) and 81% agreed/strongly agreed genetic testing should be available to the public. Only 57% of individuals knew T2D is preventable. A multivariate model to predict interest in genetic testing was adjusted for age, gender, recruitment location and BMI; significant predictors were motivation (high perceived personal risk of T2D [OR = 4.38 (1.76, 10.9)]; family history [OR = 2.56 (1.46, 4.48)]; desire to know risk prior to disease onset [OR = 3.25 (1.94, 5.42)]; and knowing T2D is preventable [OR = 2.11 (1.24, 3.60)], intention (if the cost is free [OR = 10.2 (4.27, 24.6)]; and learning T2D is preventable [OR = 5.18 (1.95, 13.7)]) and trust of genetic testing results [OR = 0.03 (0.003, 0.30)]. Individuals are interested in genetic testing for T2D risk which offers unique information that is personalized. Financial accessibility, validity of the test and availability of diabetes prevention programs were identified as predictors of interest in T2D testing.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4720283?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer Wessel
Jyoti Gupta
Mary de Groot
spellingShingle Jennifer Wessel
Jyoti Gupta
Mary de Groot
Factors Motivating Individuals to Consider Genetic Testing for Type 2 Diabetes Risk Prediction.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jennifer Wessel
Jyoti Gupta
Mary de Groot
author_sort Jennifer Wessel
title Factors Motivating Individuals to Consider Genetic Testing for Type 2 Diabetes Risk Prediction.
title_short Factors Motivating Individuals to Consider Genetic Testing for Type 2 Diabetes Risk Prediction.
title_full Factors Motivating Individuals to Consider Genetic Testing for Type 2 Diabetes Risk Prediction.
title_fullStr Factors Motivating Individuals to Consider Genetic Testing for Type 2 Diabetes Risk Prediction.
title_full_unstemmed Factors Motivating Individuals to Consider Genetic Testing for Type 2 Diabetes Risk Prediction.
title_sort factors motivating individuals to consider genetic testing for type 2 diabetes risk prediction.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description The purpose of this study was to identify attitudes and perceptions of willingness to participate in genetic testing for type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk prediction in the general population. Adults (n = 598) were surveyed on attitudes about utilizing genetic testing to predict future risk of T2D. Participants were recruited from public libraries (53%), online registry (37%) and a safety net hospital emergency department (10%). Respondents were 37 ± 11 years old, primarily White (54%), female (69%), college educated (46%), with an annual income ≥$25,000 (56%). Half of participants were interested in genetic testing for T2D (52%) and 81% agreed/strongly agreed genetic testing should be available to the public. Only 57% of individuals knew T2D is preventable. A multivariate model to predict interest in genetic testing was adjusted for age, gender, recruitment location and BMI; significant predictors were motivation (high perceived personal risk of T2D [OR = 4.38 (1.76, 10.9)]; family history [OR = 2.56 (1.46, 4.48)]; desire to know risk prior to disease onset [OR = 3.25 (1.94, 5.42)]; and knowing T2D is preventable [OR = 2.11 (1.24, 3.60)], intention (if the cost is free [OR = 10.2 (4.27, 24.6)]; and learning T2D is preventable [OR = 5.18 (1.95, 13.7)]) and trust of genetic testing results [OR = 0.03 (0.003, 0.30)]. Individuals are interested in genetic testing for T2D risk which offers unique information that is personalized. Financial accessibility, validity of the test and availability of diabetes prevention programs were identified as predictors of interest in T2D testing.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4720283?pdf=render
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