Accuracy of reported family history and effectiveness of medical record requests in genetic counseling for alzheimer disease

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Abstract

The University of British Columbia Hospital Clinic for Alzheimer Disease and Related Disorders (UBCH-CARD) invests significant effort to obtain medical records for the confirmation of patient-reported family histories of dementia. The effectiveness of requesting these records was assessed through a review of the 275 requests made by UBCH-CARD genetic counselors during the 24-month period of January 1, 2005-December 31, 2006. The results were categorized according to outcome. Useful medical records were obtained from 92 (33.5%) requests: 77 (28%) records supported, and 15 (5.5%) records did not support, the patient-reported information. An additional 20 (7.5%) requests yielded only vague information. When verification was possible, patient-reported family histories of Alzheimer disease, dementia, or memory loss were accurate in 84% of cases. During the study period, almost 500 h of genetic counselor work time was spent obtaining, reviewing, and following-up on records received. Changes made to UBCH-CARD procedure in response to these findings are discussed. © 2010 National Society of Genetic Counselors, Inc.

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APA

Alexander, E. L. R., Butler, R. K., Guimond, C., Butler, B., & Sadovnick, A. D. (2011). Accuracy of reported family history and effectiveness of medical record requests in genetic counseling for alzheimer disease. Journal of Genetic Counseling, 20(2), 129–135. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10897-010-9330-0

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