Consent for Newborn Screening: The Attitudes of Health Care Providers
- 22 September 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Public Health Genomics
- Vol. 13 (3) , 181-190
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000240966
Abstract
Background: As newborn screening (NBS) expands to meet a broader definition of benefit, the scope of parental consent warrants reconsideration. Methods: We conducted a mixed methods study of health care provider attitudes toward consent for NBS, including a survey (n = 1,615) and semi-structured interviews (n = 36). Results: Consent practices and attitudes varied by provider but the majority supported mandatory screening (63.4%) and only 36.6% supported some form of parental discretion. Few health care providers (18.6%) supported seeking explicit consent for screening condition-by-condition, but a larger minority (39.6%) supported seeking consent for the disclosure of incidentally generated sickle cell carrier results. Qualitative findings illuminate these preferences: respondents who favored consent emphasized its ease while dissenters saw consent as highly complex. Conclusion: Few providers supported explicit consent for NBS. Further, those who supported consent viewed it as a simple process. Arguably, these attitudes reflect the public health emergency NBS once was, rather than the public health service it has become. The complexity of NBS panels may have to be aligned with providers’ capacity to implement screening appropriately, or providers will need sufficient resources to engage in a more nuanced approach to consent for expanded NBS.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Is my sick child healthy? Is my healthy child sick?: Changing parental experiences of cystic fibrosis in the age of expanded newborn screeningSocial Science & Medicine, 2008
- Communication of positive newborn screening results for sickle cell disease and sickle cell trait: Variation across statesAmerican Journal Of Medical Genetics Part C-Seminars In Medical Genetics, 2008
- Introducing new screens: Why are we all doing different things?Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease, 2007
- Piercing the veil: The marginalization of midwives in the United StatesSocial Science & Medicine, 2007
- Mothers’ accounts of screening newborn babies in Wales (UK)Midwifery, 2007
- Balancing benefits and risks for cystic fibrosis newborn screening: implications for policy decisionsThe Journal of Pediatrics, 2005
- Talking with parents before newborn screeningThe Journal of Pediatrics, 2005
- Implementation of Informed Consent for a Cystic Fibrosis Newborn Screening Program in France: Low Refusal Rates for Optional TestingThe Journal of Pediatrics, 2005
- Developmental progress in Duchenne muscular dystrophy: lessons for earlier detectionEuropean Journal of Paediatric Neurology, 2004
- Very High Compliance in an Expanded MS-MS-Based Newborn Screening Program despite Written Parental ConsentPreventive Medicine, 2002