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Family History Collection & Use in Oregon FQHCs: Current Practices & Future Directions. Amy Zlot, MPH Beverly Mielke, MD, MPH Oregon Genetics Program. Overview. Intern Project Background Genomics Family history Family history form review Interviews with clinicians
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Family History Collection & Use in Oregon FQHCs: Current Practices & Future Directions Amy Zlot, MPH Beverly Mielke, MD, MPH Oregon Genetics Program
Overview • Intern Project • Background • Genomics • Family history • Family history form review • Interviews with clinicians • Family history template development
CDC Genomics • Expand MCH focus of single gene disorders • Cystic Fibrosis • Focus on adult onset complex chronic conditions • Diabetes • Asthma • Integrate genomics into public health programs
Family History Form Review • Goals of this part of the project: • Determine which diseases most commonly appear on forms • Examine the structure of various forms
Methods • Collected a blank copy of the patient intake form from all 26 FQHCs • Developed a matrix to record results • Background literature search to develop a list of diseases with the strongest genetic links
Results of Form Review • 96% of Oregon FQHCs have a Fhx section on their initial patient intake form (25/26) • Remarkable amount of variety in the forms • Diseases and family members • Basic structure
Interviews with FQHC Clinicians • 10 clinician interviews • 6 urban, 3 rural, 1 frontier • 5 MDs, 5 NP or PA • All primary care clinicians • 7 female, 3 male • Experience: 1.5-29 years, median = 6.5 years • Clinic size: 3-23 clinicians, primarily Family Practice • EMR: 40% yes, 60% no
When is Fhx information collected? • Initial clinic visit (10/10) • Other visits • wellness visits (physicals and annual exams) • first prenatal care • chronic disease management • new symptoms/new diagnosis where Fhx is pertinent • yearly review expected at one clinic
How would you describe the accuracy of Fhx information provided by patients? • “Accurate to the extent that patients are aware of information and think of it” • Patients often unable to give specific details about diseases • Patients aware of cancer, heart attacks, diabetes, but unaware of high cholesterol or high blood pressure • Cultural differences influence what people know about their Fhx
What do you find is the biggest challenge in collecting Fhx information? • Most common responses: • Clinicians’ lack of time • Limited patient knowledge • Patients’ lack of understanding why Fhx is important • Other thoughts: • Many patients are adopted or estranged from at least one parent • Large amount of information to collect during a visit, and Fhx is a lower priority
Which diseases do you focus on in Fhx collection? • Most common responses: • Diabetes • Heart disease • Cancer (especially breast and colon) • Mental health (bipolar, schizophrenia, depression) • Drug and alcohol use
Do you change your recommendations for screening based on Fhx information? • 100% said yes • Common examples were for breast cancer, colon cancer, heart disease, and diabetes
Do you change your recommendations for treatment based on Fhx information? • 50% yes, 50% no • Most common change is being more aggressive in starting prescription drug treatment for diabetes or high cholesterol if a patient has a strong Fhx
What do you think about the form that your clinic uses? • Wide range of opinions • Concerns about the reading level of the form • Patients “often skip portions or clearly haven’t read the form carefully. The form is more detailed than is appropriate for the reading and educational level of my patients.” • “Good starting point to gather information” • Others felt the information gathered was inaccurate and minimally helpful
What causes the most confusion to patients about the form? • Only filled out one side • Don’t know disease names/categories • Confuse Fhx section with personal medical history • Answer questions for non-immediate family, even when specified • Unclear which box to check for which condition
Suggestions for a template • Limit number of diseases • Specify which family members to include • Ask about alcohol/drug abuse • Ask about mental health • Only include diseases that would influence screening, care, and education
Have any of your close blood relatives (grandparents, parents, brothers, sisters, children) ever had the following? Healthoregon.org/genetics
Clinician Responses • Suggestions for improvement (already incorporated): • simplify language (psychiatric disordermental problem) • change “alcohol/drug abuse” to “alcohol or drug problem” • Include asthma
Conclusions • Goal: early detection and prevention of disease in high-risk patients • Point of asking for Fhx on intake form is to “start the conversation” • Form must be concise, can’t expect complete information to be gathered from form alone
Next Steps • Overall • Does the collection of family history make a difference? • Clinical utility • Form structure • Need to evaluate effectiveness of different structures • Public Health Message • Why family history matters
References • Acheson LS, Wiesner GL, Zyzanski SJ, et al. Family history-taking in community family practice: implications for genetic screening. Genetics in Med 2000;2:180-185. • American Medical Association. Family medical history in disease prevention. 2004. Available at www.ama-assn.org/go/familyhistory. Accessed 20 October 2006. • Guttmacher AE, Collins FS, Carmona RH. The family history—more important than ever. N Engl J Med 2004;351:2333-6. • Harris EL, McMullen C. Final report: family history in clinical practice. Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research. March 31, 2006. • Johnson J, Giles RT, Ware J et al. Utah’s family high risk program: bridging the gap between genomics and public health. Prev Chronic Dis, 2005 Apr. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2005/apr/04_0132.htm. Accessed 5 October 2006. • Luna B, Feinglos MN. Oral agents in the management of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Am Fam Physician 2001;63(9):1747-56. • Oregon Department of Human Services. CD Summary: All in the Family. July 11, 2006. Available at http://oregon.gov/DHS/ph/cdsummary. Accessed 15 September 2006. • Rich EC, Burke W, Heaton CJ et al. Reconsidering the family history in primary care. J Gen Intern Med 2004;19:273-280. • Yoon PW, Scheuner MT, Gwinn M, et al. Awareness of family health history as a risk factor for disease—United States, 2004. MMWR Weekly 2004;53:1044-1047.
Thank you Beverly Mielke FQHC clinicians