Title: NHS Sickle Cell and Thalassaemia screening programme
1NHS Sickle Cell and Thalassaemia screening
programme
- Reality not hype
- genetics and primary care
- RCP
- 30 January 2004
2NHS Sickle Cell and Thalassaemia Screening
ProgrammeKings College London
http//www.kcl-phs.org.uk/ haemscreeningalliso
n.streetly_at_kcl.ac.uk
3Context Antenatal screening and genetics
- By 2004 there will be
- effective and appropriate screening programmes
for women and children - NHS Plan Chapter 13 (England)
- including
- Downs programme
- Sickle Cell Thalassaemia
- (Cystic Fibrosis)
- Infectious disease programme
-
4CONTEXT baseline position
- a range of approaches to-
- information
- screening for risk (e.g. ethnic question, age)
- testing (collection method, methods used,
analysis, interpretation and follow-up of
results/information) - services to support
- approach to consent
- information giving etc
5Context advice and policy
- National Screening Committee (see NeLH)
- NICE guidance for practitioners
- (some screening and some other)
- Women and Childrens NSF
- (due this year)?
- CHAI inspections in future
- Consistency ? across all these
6Antenatal programme
- Much of the policy has now been decided
- Action now to ensure that there is consistency in
message on the policy - Emphasis moves to standardisation of approach-
communication, education and organisation are
very important
7Models of care policy direction
- midwifery lead care
- reduce unnecessary visits in pregnancy to release
resources - shift emphasis to earlier visits to midwife
8Context issues to resolve
- Relationship to/boundary with primary care and
early care (including pre-conceptual care) not
clarified - Changes in GP contract and opportunities for
enhanced service still unclear not yet grasped - Midwifery staffing and delivery unit staffing are
outstanding issues without reducing the antenatal
visits
9Antenatal screening integration into clinical
care
- Vertical programmes need to integrate
- Education and training as a package
- Information for professionals as a packages (for
routine info with conditin specific info for
screen positives) - IT systems as a package
- Quality management and feedback as a package
10Education and training needs to support the
antenatal programme
- Policy for each area as a package
- Genetics knowledge and understanding
- Communication, cultural competence
- Counselling screen positives and referal onwards
- Organisation and delivery of services in local
area
11Risks and tensions Sickle Thal
- genetic screening for a recessive condition which
detects carriers risks associated with
populations and professionals understanding
or not are we ready for this - Cystic Fibrosis issues apply but have not been
much raised yet - HbO- populations affected by sickle and thal not
visible and problems not perceived or rated as an
issue
12Communication
- Training including packages for training the
trainer - Community engagement and media awareness
- Materials, reports and information
- For professionals and wider public
- Public education and awareness will also drive
the professionals approach and attitudes to these
programmes
13Information and community awareness
- whole antenatal screening programme
- antenatal genetic screening - Hbo,CF
- Whole newborn screening programme - PKU, CH etc
info needed antenatally - Users informed give consent
- community awareness and publicity
- Community engagement
14Public knowledge and understanding
- Not yet internalised and placed new knowledge
in our value and knowledge system - Still sensational genetics etc
- Place and contribution of genetics still
specialist not generalist - Too much emphasis on science or extremes of
development and not enough on supporting
individuals to deal with this information and
these decisions - Move out from ivory towers and into the
mainstream needs to be planned for
15Ethical framework
- Antenatal screening relates to assessment of the
mother and risks to her health as well as
assessment of the foetus and risks to its health - Informed decision making includes the right to
decide to opt for termination of pregnancy in
some situations (some grey areas eg timing and
severity)
16Decision making
- right of woman and partner to be offered the
choice (c.f. fundamentalist views) - right of woman and partner to decline the offer
(c.f. eugenics) - right of professional to acknowledge their own
framework and refer elsewhere
17GPs perspective
- Antenatal programme
- - needs modernising consent, information,communi
cation, IT - - GPs often not informed of results lifelong
info ICRS spine - - information for parents professionals
-standardised - - public awareness consistent messages needed
- Management of carriers and genetic implications
- when to do this for CF and HBO
- what about rarer conditions?
- evidence base for best way to do this lacking
- genetics centres, specialist counsellors, other
services - litigation if fail to advise of risk to future
pregnancies - Family practitioner and long term role makes
primary care well placed to take on these issues - Preconceptual testing
- ideal opportunity at first visit or when
contraceptive advice provided
18Risks and tensions genetic aspects
- Challenges in how identification of affected
pregnancy is presented, accepted and received in
the many different communities - (e.g. arranged marriages or devaluation of
brides) - Stigma of carrier status
- National policy on antenatal screening but no
consideration yet of preconceptual testing or
screening which can be more acceptable - primary care ideally located to work on this but
timescale ? - the ten year plan