Attitudes of high school students toward carrier screening and prenatal diagnosis of cystic fibrosis Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • AbstractThe identification of the common mutations of the cystic fibrosis (CF) transmembrane conductance regulator gene has made it feasible to consider population‐based CF carrier screening. However, the demand for such programs will depend largely on the attitudes and perceptions of the general public toward genetic testing. As part of a high school science project, we initiated studies to determine the attitudes of high school students toward carrier screening for CF and other genetic disorders. From a class of 120 biology students, 101 consented to participate in the study. Most of the students were of European ancestry and there were no known family histories of CF. Buccal swabs were obtained for PCR amplification and heteroduplex detection of the most common CF mutation (ΔF508). The students and their corresponding buccal swabs were assigned random numbers and the results were kept confidential unless the student requested his/her test result. A questionnaire was used to assess the students' attitudes toward carrier screening and prenatal diagnosis. This questionnaire was given both before testing and after the class was informed that three individuals were carriers of the ΔF508 mutation. Overall, the data indicate that high school students are receptive to the concepts of carrier screening and prenatal diagnosis. However, their attitudes changed considerably when informed of the possibility that they might actually be a ΔF508 carrier, with marked increases in the level of indecision. At the conclusion of the study, very few students (5/101) requested information about their ΔF508 carrier status.

publication date

  • June 1994