47 results on '"Molster C"'
Search Results
2. Changes to the employers' use of genetic information and Non-discrimination for health insurance in the USA: Implications for Australians
- Author
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Bilkey, G.A., Baynam, G., Molster, C., Bilkey, G.A., Baynam, G., and Molster, C.
- Abstract
In the USA, a bill has been introduced to the senate that may jeopardize an individual's rights to privacy and non-discrimination. This piece examines the proposed Preserving Employee Wellness Programs Act (PEWPA), and implications this will have on the use of genetic information...
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- 2018
3. Initiating an undiagnosed diseases program in the Western Australian public health system
- Author
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Baynam, G, Broley, S, Bauskis, A, Pachter, N, McKenzie, F, Townshend, S, Slee, J, Kiraly-Borri, C, Vasudevan, A, Hawkins, A, Schofield, L, Helmholz, P, Palmer, R, Kung, S, Walker, CE, Molster, C, Lewis, B, Mina, K, Beilby, J, Pathak, G, Poulton, C, Groza, T, Zankl, A, Roscioli, T, Dinger, ME, Mattick, JS, Gahl, W, Groft, S, Tifft, C, Taruscio, D, Lasko, P, Kosaki, K, Wilhelm, H, Melegh, B, Carapetis, J, Jana, S, Chaney, G, Johns, A, Owen, PW, Daly, F, Weeramanthri, T, Dawkins, H, Goldblatt, J, Baynam, G, Broley, S, Bauskis, A, Pachter, N, McKenzie, F, Townshend, S, Slee, J, Kiraly-Borri, C, Vasudevan, A, Hawkins, A, Schofield, L, Helmholz, P, Palmer, R, Kung, S, Walker, CE, Molster, C, Lewis, B, Mina, K, Beilby, J, Pathak, G, Poulton, C, Groza, T, Zankl, A, Roscioli, T, Dinger, ME, Mattick, JS, Gahl, W, Groft, S, Tifft, C, Taruscio, D, Lasko, P, Kosaki, K, Wilhelm, H, Melegh, B, Carapetis, J, Jana, S, Chaney, G, Johns, A, Owen, PW, Daly, F, Weeramanthri, T, Dawkins, H, and Goldblatt, J
- Abstract
© 2017 The Author(s). Background: New approaches are required to address the needs of complex undiagnosed diseases patients. These approaches include clinical genomic diagnostic pipelines, utilizing intra- and multi-disciplinary platforms, as well as specialty-specific genomic clinics. Both are advancing diagnostic rates. However, complementary cross-disciplinary approaches are also critical to address those patients with multisystem disorders who traverse the bounds of multiple specialties and remain undiagnosed despite existing intra-specialty and genomic-focused approaches. The diagnostic possibilities of undiagnosed diseases include genetic and non-genetic conditions. The focus on genetic diseases addresses some of these disorders, however a cross-disciplinary approach is needed that also simultaneously addresses other disorder types. Herein, we describe the initiation and summary outcomes of a public health system approach for complex undiagnosed patients- the Undiagnosed Diseases Program-Western Australia (UDP-WA). Results: Briefly the UDP-WA is: i) one of a complementary suite of approaches that is being delivered within health service, and with community engagement, to address the needs of those with severe undiagnosed diseases; ii) delivered within a public health system to support equitable access to health care, including for those from remote and regional areas; iii) providing diagnoses and improved patient care; iv) delivering a platform for in-service and real time genomic and phenomic education for clinicians that traverses a diverse range of specialties; v) retaining and recapturing clinical expertise; vi) supporting the education of junior and more senior medical staff; vii) designed to integrate with clinical translational research; and viii) is supporting greater connectedness for patients, families and medical staff. Conclusion: The UDP-WA has been initiated in the public health system to complement existing clinical genomic approaches; it has be
- Published
- 2017
4. Initiating an undiagnosed diseases program in the Western Australian public health system
- Author
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Baynam, G., Broley, S., Bauskis, A., Pachter, N., McKenzie, F., Townshend, S., Slee, J., Kiraly-Borri, C., Vasudevan, A., Hawkins, A., Schofield, L., Helmholz, P., Palmer, R., Kung, S., Walker, C.E., Molster, C., Lewis, B., Mina, K., Beilby, J., Pathak, G., Poulton, C., Groza, T., Zankl, A., Roscioli, T., Dinger, M.E., Mattick, J.S., Gahl, W., Groft, S., Tifft, C., Taruscio, D., Lasko, P., Kosaki, K., Wilhelm, H., Melegh, B., Carapetis, J., Jana, S., Chaney, G., Johns, A., Owen, P.W., Daly, F., Weeramanthri, T., Dawkins, H., Goldblatt, J., Baynam, G., Broley, S., Bauskis, A., Pachter, N., McKenzie, F., Townshend, S., Slee, J., Kiraly-Borri, C., Vasudevan, A., Hawkins, A., Schofield, L., Helmholz, P., Palmer, R., Kung, S., Walker, C.E., Molster, C., Lewis, B., Mina, K., Beilby, J., Pathak, G., Poulton, C., Groza, T., Zankl, A., Roscioli, T., Dinger, M.E., Mattick, J.S., Gahl, W., Groft, S., Tifft, C., Taruscio, D., Lasko, P., Kosaki, K., Wilhelm, H., Melegh, B., Carapetis, J., Jana, S., Chaney, G., Johns, A., Owen, P.W., Daly, F., Weeramanthri, T., Dawkins, H., and Goldblatt, J.
- Abstract
Background: New approaches are required to address the needs of complex undiagnosed diseases patients. These approaches include clinical genomic diagnostic pipelines, utilizing intra- and multi-disciplinary platforms, as well as specialty-specific genomic clinics. Both are advancing diagnostic rates. However, complementary cross-disciplinary approaches are also critical to address those patients with multisystem disorders who traverse the bounds of multiple specialties and remain undiagnosed despite existing intra-specialty and genomic-focused approaches. The diagnostic possibilities of undiagnosed diseases include genetic and non-genetic conditions. The focus on genetic diseases addresses some of these disorders, however a cross-disciplinary approach is needed that also simultaneously addresses other disorder types. Herein, we describe the initiation and summary outcomes of a public health system approach for complex undiagnosed patients- the Undiagnosed Diseases Program-Western Australia (UDP-WA). Results: Briefly the UDP-WA is: i) one of a complementary suite of approaches that is being delivered within health service, and with community engagement, to address the needs of those with severe undiagnosed diseases; ii) delivered within a public health system to support equitable access to health care, including for those from remote and regional areas; iii) providing diagnoses and improved patient care; iv) delivering a platform for in-service and real time genomic and phenomic education for clinicians that traverses a diverse range of specialties; v) retaining and recapturing clinical expertise; vi) supporting the education of junior and more senior medical staff; vii) designed to integrate with clinical translational research; and viii) is supporting greater connectedness for patients, families and medical staff. Conclusion: The UDP-WA has been initiated in the public health system to complement existing clinical genomic approaches; it has been targeted to those w
- Published
- 2017
5. The collective impact of rare diseases in Western Australia: an estimate using a population-based cohort
- Author
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Walker, C.E., Mahede, T., Davis, G., Miller, L.J., Girschik, J., Brameld, K., Sun, W., Rathod, A., Ayme, S., Zubrick, S.R., Baynam, G.S., Molster, C., Dawkins, H.J.S., Weeramanthri, T.S., Walker, C.E., Mahede, T., Davis, G., Miller, L.J., Girschik, J., Brameld, K., Sun, W., Rathod, A., Ayme, S., Zubrick, S.R., Baynam, G.S., Molster, C., Dawkins, H.J.S., and Weeramanthri, T.S.
- Abstract
Purpose: It has been argued that rare diseases should be recognized as a public health priority. However, there is a shortage of epidemiological data describing the true burden of rare diseases. This study investigated hospital service use to provide a better understanding of the collective health and economic impacts of rare diseases. Methods: Novel methodology was developed using a carefully constructed set of diagnostic codes, a selection of rare disease cohorts from hospital administrative data, and advanced data--linkage technologies. Outcomes included health-service use and hospital admission costs. Results: In 2010, cohort members who were alive represented approximately 2.0% of the Western Australian population. The cohort accounted for 4.6% of people discharged from hospital and 9.9% of hospital discharges, and it had a greater average length of stay than the general population. The total cost of hospital discharges for the cohort represented 10.5% of 2010 state inpatient hospital costs. Conclusions: This population-based cohort study provides strong new evidence of a marked disparity between the proportion of the population with rare diseases and their combined health-system costs. The methodology will inform future rare-disease studies, and the evidence will guide government strategies for managing the service needs of people living with rare diseases.
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- 2017
6. Improved diagnosis and care for rare diseases through implementation of precision public health framework
- Author
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Baynam, G., Bowman, F., Lister, K., Walker, C.E., Pachter, N., Goldblatt, J., Boycott, K.M., Gahl, W.A., Kosaki, K., Adachi, T., Ishii, K., Mahede, T., McKenzie, F., Townshend, S., Slee, J., Kiraly-Borri, C., Vasudevan, A., Hawkins, A., Broley, S., Schofield, L., Verhoef, H., Groza, T., Zankl, A., Robinson, P.N., Haendel, M., Brudno, M., Mattick, J.S., Dinger, M.E., Roscioli, T., Cowley, M.J., Olry, A., Hanauer, M., Alkuraya, F.S., Taruscio, D., Posada de la Paz, M., Lochmüller, H., Bushby, K., Thompson, R., Hedley, V., Lasko, P., Mina, K., Beilby, J., Tifft, C., Davis, M., Laing, N.G., Julkowska, D., Le Cam, Y., Terry, S.F., Kaufmann, P., Eerola, I., Norstedt, I., Rath, A., Suematsu, M., Groft, S.C., Austin, C.P., Draghia-Akli, R., Weeramanthri, T.S., Molster, C., Dawkins, H.J.S., Baynam, G., Bowman, F., Lister, K., Walker, C.E., Pachter, N., Goldblatt, J., Boycott, K.M., Gahl, W.A., Kosaki, K., Adachi, T., Ishii, K., Mahede, T., McKenzie, F., Townshend, S., Slee, J., Kiraly-Borri, C., Vasudevan, A., Hawkins, A., Broley, S., Schofield, L., Verhoef, H., Groza, T., Zankl, A., Robinson, P.N., Haendel, M., Brudno, M., Mattick, J.S., Dinger, M.E., Roscioli, T., Cowley, M.J., Olry, A., Hanauer, M., Alkuraya, F.S., Taruscio, D., Posada de la Paz, M., Lochmüller, H., Bushby, K., Thompson, R., Hedley, V., Lasko, P., Mina, K., Beilby, J., Tifft, C., Davis, M., Laing, N.G., Julkowska, D., Le Cam, Y., Terry, S.F., Kaufmann, P., Eerola, I., Norstedt, I., Rath, A., Suematsu, M., Groft, S.C., Austin, C.P., Draghia-Akli, R., Weeramanthri, T.S., Molster, C., and Dawkins, H.J.S.
- Abstract
Public health relies on technologies to produce and analyse data, as well as effectively develop and implement policies and practices. An example is the public health practice of epidemiology, which relies on computational technology to monitor the health status of populations, identify disadvantaged or at risk population groups and thereby inform health policy and priority setting. Critical to achieving health improvements for the underserved population of people living with rare diseases is early diagnosis and best care. In the rare diseases field, the vast majority of diseases are caused by destructive but previously difficult to identify protein-coding gene mutations. The reduction in cost of genetic testing and advances in the clinical use of genome sequencing, data science and imaging are converging to provide more precise understandings of the ‘person-time-place’ triad. That is: who is affected (people); when the disease is occurring (time); and where the disease is occurring (place). Consequently we are witnessing a paradigm shift in public health policy and practice towards ‘precision public health’. Patient and stakeholder engagement has informed the need for a national public health policy framework for rare diseases. The engagement approach in different countries has produced highly comparable outcomes and objectives. Knowledge and experience sharing across the international rare diseases networks and partnerships has informed the development of the Western Australian Rare Diseases Strategic Framework 2015–2018 (RD Framework) and Australian government health briefings on the need for a National plan. The RD Framework is guiding the translation of genomic and other technologies into the Western Australian health system, leading to greater precision in diagnostic pathways and care, and is an example of how a precision public health framework can improve health outcomes for the rare diseases population. Five vignettes are used to illustrate how policy decis
- Published
- 2017
7. Indigenous genetics and rare diseases: Harmony, diversity and equity
- Author
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Baynam, G., Molster, C., Bauskis, A., Kowal, E., Savarirayan, R., Kelaher, M., Easteal, S., Massey, L., Garvey, G., Goldblatt, J., Pachter, N., Weeramanthri, T.S., Dawkins, H.J.S., Baynam, G., Molster, C., Bauskis, A., Kowal, E., Savarirayan, R., Kelaher, M., Easteal, S., Massey, L., Garvey, G., Goldblatt, J., Pachter, N., Weeramanthri, T.S., and Dawkins, H.J.S.
- Abstract
Advances in our understanding of genetic and rare diseases are changing the face of healthcare. Crucially, the global community must implement these advances equitably to reduce health disparities, including between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. We take an Australian perspective to illustrate some key areas that are fundamental to the equitable translation of new knowledge for the improved diagnosis of genetic and rare diseases for Indigenous people. Specifically, we focus on inequalities in access to clinical genetics services and the lack of genetic and phenomic reference data to inform diagnoses. We provide examples of ways in which these inequities are being addressed through Australian partnerships to support a harmonious and inclusive approach to ensure that benefits from traditional wisdom, community knowledge and shared experiences are interwoven to support and inform implementation of new knowledge from genomics and precision public health. This will serve to deliver benefits to all of our diverse citizens, including Indigenous populations.
- Published
- 2017
8. Improved diagnosis and care for rare diseases through implementation of precision public health framework
- Author
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Baynam, Gareth, Bowman, F., Lister, K., Walker, C., Pachter, N., Goldblatt, J., Boycott, K., Gahl, W., Kosaki, K., Adachi, T., Ishii, K., Mahede, T., McKenzie, Fiona, Townshend, S., Slee, J., Kiraly-Borri, C., Vasudevan, A., Hawkins, A., Broley, S., Schofield, L., Verhoef, H., Groza, T., Zankl, A., Robinson, P., Haendel, M., Brudno, M., Mattick, J., Dinger, M., Roscioli, T., Cowley, M., Olry, A., Hanauer, M., Alkuraya, F., Taruscio, D., Posada De La Paz, M., Lochmüller, H., Bushby, K., Thompson, R., Hedley, V., Lasko, P., Mina, K., Beilby, J., Tifft, C., Davis, M., Laing, N., Julkowska, D., Le Cam, Y., Terry, S., Kaufmann, P., Eerola, I., Norstedt, I., Rath, A., Suematsu, M., Groft, S., Austin, C., Draghia-Akli, R., Weeramanthri, Tarun, Molster, C., Dawkins, Hugh, Baynam, Gareth, Bowman, F., Lister, K., Walker, C., Pachter, N., Goldblatt, J., Boycott, K., Gahl, W., Kosaki, K., Adachi, T., Ishii, K., Mahede, T., McKenzie, Fiona, Townshend, S., Slee, J., Kiraly-Borri, C., Vasudevan, A., Hawkins, A., Broley, S., Schofield, L., Verhoef, H., Groza, T., Zankl, A., Robinson, P., Haendel, M., Brudno, M., Mattick, J., Dinger, M., Roscioli, T., Cowley, M., Olry, A., Hanauer, M., Alkuraya, F., Taruscio, D., Posada De La Paz, M., Lochmüller, H., Bushby, K., Thompson, R., Hedley, V., Lasko, P., Mina, K., Beilby, J., Tifft, C., Davis, M., Laing, N., Julkowska, D., Le Cam, Y., Terry, S., Kaufmann, P., Eerola, I., Norstedt, I., Rath, A., Suematsu, M., Groft, S., Austin, C., Draghia-Akli, R., Weeramanthri, Tarun, Molster, C., and Dawkins, Hugh
- Abstract
© Springer International Publishing AG 2017. Public health relies on technologies to produce and analyse data, as well as effectively develop and implement policies and practices. An example is the public health practice of epidemiology, which relies on computational technology to monitor the health status of populations, identify disadvantaged or at risk population groups and thereby inform health policy and priority setting. Critical to achieving health improvements for the underserved population of people living with rare diseases is early diagnosis and best care. In the rare diseases field, the vast majority of diseases are caused by destructive but previously difficult to identify protein-coding gene mutations. The reduction in cost of genetic testing and advances in the clinical use of genome sequencing, data science and imaging are converging to provide more precise understandings of the ‘person-time-place’ triad. That is: who is affected (people); when the disease is occurring (time); and where the disease is occurring (place). Consequently we are witnessing a paradigm shift in public health policy and practice towards ‘precision public health’. Patient and stakeholder engagement has informed the need for a national public health policy framework for rare diseases. The engagement approach in different countries has produced highly comparable outcomes and objectives. Knowledge and experience sharing across the international rare diseases networks and partnerships has informed the development of the Western Australian Rare Diseases Strategic Framework 2015?2018 (RD Framework) and Australian government health briefings on the need for a National plan. The RD Framework is guiding the translation of genomic and other technologies into the Western Australian health system, leading to greater precision in diagnostic pathways and care, and is an example of how a precision public health framework can improve health outcomes for the rare diseases population. Five vign
- Published
- 2017
9. Indigenous genetics and rare diseases: Harmony, diversity and equity
- Author
-
Baynam, Gareth, Molster, C., Bauskis, A., Kowal, E., Savarirayan, R., Kelaher, M., Easteal, S., Massey, L., Garvey, G., Goldblatt, J., Pachter, N., Weeramanthri, Tarun, Dawkins, Hugh, Baynam, Gareth, Molster, C., Bauskis, A., Kowal, E., Savarirayan, R., Kelaher, M., Easteal, S., Massey, L., Garvey, G., Goldblatt, J., Pachter, N., Weeramanthri, Tarun, and Dawkins, Hugh
- Abstract
© Springer International Publishing AG 2017. Advances in our understanding of genetic and rare diseases are changing the face of healthcare. Crucially, the global community must implement these advances equitably to reduce health disparities, including between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. We take an Australian perspective to illustrate some key areas that are fundamental to the equitable translation of new knowledge for the improved diagnosis of genetic and rare diseases for Indigenous people. Specifically, we focus on inequalities in access to clinical genetics services and the lack of genetic and phenomic reference data to inform diagnoses. We provide examples of ways in which these inequities are being addressed through Australian partnerships to support a harmonious and inclusive approach to ensure that benefits from traditional wisdom, community knowledge and shared experiences are interwoven to support and inform implementation of new knowledge from genomics and precision public health. This will serve to deliver benefits to all of our diverse citizens, including Indigenous populations.
- Published
- 2017
10. Outcomes of an international workshop on preconception expanded carrier screening: Some considerations for governments
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Molster, C., Lister, K., Metternick-Jones, S., Baynam, G., Clarke, A., Straub, V., Dawkins, Hugh, Laing, N., Molster, C., Lister, K., Metternick-Jones, S., Baynam, G., Clarke, A., Straub, V., Dawkins, Hugh, and Laing, N.
- Abstract
© 2017 Molster, Lister, Metternick-Jones, Baynam, Clarke, Straub, Dawkins and Laing. Background: Consideration of expanded carrier screening has become an emerging issue for governments. However, traditional criteria for decision-making regarding screening programs do not incorporate all the issues relevant to expanded carrier screening. Further, there is a lack of consistent guidance in the literature regarding the development of appropriate criteria for government assessment of expanded carrier screening. Given this, a workshop was held to identify key public policy issues related to preconception expanded carrier screening, which governments should consider when deciding whether to publicly fund such programs.Methods: In June 2015, a satellite workshop was held at the European Society of Human Genetics Conference. It was structured around two design features: (1) the provision of information from a range of perspectives and (2) small group deliberations on the key issues that governments need to consider and the benefits, risks, and challenges of implementing publicly funded whole-population preconception carrier screening.Results: Forty-one international experts attended the workshop. The deliberations centered primarily on the c onditions to be tested and the elements of the screening program itself. Participants expected only severe conditions to be screened but were concerned about the lack of a consensus definition of "severe." Issues raised regarding the screening program included the purpose, benefits, harms, target population, program acceptability, components of a program, and economic evaluation. Participants also made arguments for consideration of the accuracy of screening tests.Conclusion: A wide range of issues require careful consideration by governments that want to assess expanded carrier screening. Traditional criteria for government decision-making regarding screening programs are not a "best fit" for expanded carrier screening and new models o
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- 2017
11. 3-Dimensional Facial Analysis-Facing Precision Public Health.
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Baynam, G., Bauskis, A., Pachter, N., Schofield, L., Verhoef, H., Palmer, R., Kung, S., Helmholz, Petra, Ridout, M., Walker, C., Hawkins, A., Goldblatt, J., Weeramanthri, T., Dawkins, H., Molster, C., Baynam, G., Bauskis, A., Pachter, N., Schofield, L., Verhoef, H., Palmer, R., Kung, S., Helmholz, Petra, Ridout, M., Walker, C., Hawkins, A., Goldblatt, J., Weeramanthri, T., Dawkins, H., and Molster, C.
- Abstract
Precision public health is a new field driven by technological advances that enable more precise descriptions and analyses of individuals and population groups, with a view to improving the overall health of populations. This promises to lead to more precise clinical and public health practices, across the continuum of prevention, screening, diagnosis, and treatment. A phenotype is the set of observable characteristics of an individual resulting from the interaction of a genotype with the environment. Precision (deep) phenotyping applies innovative technologies to exhaustively and more precisely examine the discrete components of a phenotype and goes beyond the information usually included in medical charts. This form of phenotyping is a critical component of more precise diagnostic capability and 3-dimensional facial analysis (3DFA) is a key technological enabler in this domain. In this paper, we examine the potential of 3DFA as a public health tool, by viewing it against the 10 essential public health services of the "public health wheel," developed by the US Centers for Disease Control. This provides an illustrative framework to gage current and emergent applications of genomic technologies for implementing precision public health.
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- 2017
12. The risk of re-identification versus the need to identify individuals in rare disease research
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Hansson, M.G., Lochmüller, H., Riess, O., Schaefer, F., Orth, M., Rubinstein, Y., Molster, C., Dawkins, H., Taruscio, D., Posada, M., Woods, S., Hansson, M.G., Lochmüller, H., Riess, O., Schaefer, F., Orth, M., Rubinstein, Y., Molster, C., Dawkins, H., Taruscio, D., Posada, M., and Woods, S.
- Abstract
There is a growing concern in the ethics literature and among policy makers that de-identification or coding of personal data and biospecimens is not sufficient for protecting research subjects from privacy invasions and possible breaches of confidentiality due to the possibility of unauthorized re-identification. At the same time, there is a need in medical science to be able to identify individual patients. In particular for rare disease research there is a special and well-documented need for research collaboration so that data and biosamples from multiple independent studies can be shared across borders. In this article, we identify the needs and arguments related to de-identification and re-identification of patients and research subjects and suggest how the different needs may be balanced within a framework of using unique encrypted identifiers.
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- 2016
13. The rare and undiagnosed diseases diagnostic service – Application of massively parallel sequencing in a state-wide clinical service
- Author
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Baynam, G., Pachter, N., McKenzie, F., Townshend, S., Slee, J., Kiraly-Borri, C., Vasudevan, A., Hawkins, A., Broley, S., Schofield, L., Verhoef, H., Walker, C.E., Molster, C., Blackwell, J.M., Jamieson, S., Tang, D., Lassmann, T., Mina, K., Beilby, J., Davis, M., Laing, N., Murphy, L., Weeramanthri, T., Dawkins, H., Goldblatt, J., Baynam, G., Pachter, N., McKenzie, F., Townshend, S., Slee, J., Kiraly-Borri, C., Vasudevan, A., Hawkins, A., Broley, S., Schofield, L., Verhoef, H., Walker, C.E., Molster, C., Blackwell, J.M., Jamieson, S., Tang, D., Lassmann, T., Mina, K., Beilby, J., Davis, M., Laing, N., Murphy, L., Weeramanthri, T., Dawkins, H., and Goldblatt, J.
- Abstract
Background The Rare and Undiagnosed Diseases Diagnostic Service (RUDDS) refers to a genomic diagnostic platform operating within the Western Australian Government clinical services delivered through Genetic Services of Western Australia (GSWA). GSWA has provided a state-wide service for clinical genetic care for 28 years and it serves a population of 2.5 million people across a geographical area of 2.5milion Km2. Within this context, GSWA has established a clinically integrated genomic diagnostic platform in partnership with other public health system managers and service providers, including but not limited to the Office of Population Health Genomics, Diagnostic Genomics (PathWest Laboratories) and with executive level support from the Department of Health. Herein we describe report presents the components of this service that are most relevant to the heterogeneity of paediatric clinical genetic care. Results Briefly the platform : i) offers multiple options including non-genetic testing; monogenic and genomic (targeted in silico filtered and whole exome) analysis; and matchmaking; ii) is delivered in a patient-centric manner that is resonant with the patient journey, it has multiple points for entry, exit and re-entry to allow people access to information they can use, when they want to receive it; iii) is synchronous with precision phenotyping methods; iv) captures new knowledge, including multiple expert review; v) is integrated with current translational genomic research activities and best practice; and vi) is designed for flexibility for interactive generation of, and integration with, clinical research for diagnostics, community engagement, policy and models of care. Conclusion The RUDDS has been established as part of routine clinical genetic services and is thus sustainable, equitably managed and seeks to translate new knowledge into efficient diagnostics and improved health for the whole community.
- Published
- 2016
14. Survey of healthcare experiences of Australian adults living with rare diseases
- Author
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Molster, C., Urwin, D., Di Pietro, L., Fookes, M., Petrie, D., van der Laan, S., Dawkins, H., Molster, C., Urwin, D., Di Pietro, L., Fookes, M., Petrie, D., van der Laan, S., and Dawkins, H.
- Abstract
Background Few studies have examined whether the healthcare needs of people living with rare diseases are being met. This study explores the experiences of Australian adults living with rare diseases in relation to diagnosis, information provision at the time of diagnosis, use of health and support services and involvement in research on their condition. Methods The survey respondents are self-selected from the population of Australian residents aged 18 years and over who are living with a rare disease. An online survey was implemented between July-August 2014. Purposive snowballing sampling was used. The results are reported as percentages with significant differences between sub-groups assessed using chi-squared analyses. Results Eight hundred ten responses were obtained from adults living with a rare disease. 92.1 % had a confirmed diagnosis, of which 30.0 % waited five or more years for a diagnosis, 66.2 % had seen three or more doctors to get a diagnosis and 45.9 % had received at least one incorrect diagnosis. Almost three quarters (72.1 %) received no or not enough information at the time of diagnosis. In the 12 months prior to the survey, over 80 % of respondents had used the services of a general practitioner and a medical specialist while around a third had been inpatients at a hospital or had visited an emergency department. Only 15.4 % of respondents had ever used paediatric services, 52.8 % of these had experienced problems in the transition from paediatric to adult services. Only 20.3 % knew of a patient registry for their condition and 24.8 % were informed of clinical trials. Conclusions These findings suggest that not all healthcare needs of people living with rare diseases are being met. Structural changes to Australian healthcare systems may be required to improve the integration and coordination of diagnosis and care. Health professionals may need greater awareness of rare diseases to improve the diagnostic process and support to meet the informat
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- 2016
15. The collective impact of rare diseases in Western Australia: an estimate using a population-based cohort.
- Author
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Walker, C., Mahede, T., Davis, G., Miller, L., Girschik, J., Brameld, Kate, Sun, W., Rath, A., Aymé, S., Zubrick, S., Baynam, G., Molster, C., Dawkins, H., Weeramanthri, T., Walker, C., Mahede, T., Davis, G., Miller, L., Girschik, J., Brameld, Kate, Sun, W., Rath, A., Aymé, S., Zubrick, S., Baynam, G., Molster, C., Dawkins, H., and Weeramanthri, T.
- Abstract
PURPOSE: It has been argued that rare diseases should be recognized as a public health priority. However, there is a shortage of epidemiological data describing the true burden of rare diseases. This study investigated hospital service use to provide a better understanding of the collective health and economic impacts of rare diseases. METHODS: Novel methodology was developed using a carefully constructed set of diagnostic codes, a selection of rare disease cohorts from hospital administrative data, and advanced data-linkage technologies. Outcomes included health-service use and hospital admission costs. RESULTS: In 2010, cohort members who were alive represented approximately 2.0% of the Western Australian population. The cohort accounted for 4.6% of people discharged from hospital and 9.9% of hospital discharges, and it had a greater average length of stay than the general population. The total cost of hospital discharges for the cohort represented 10.5% of 2010 state inpatient hospital costs. CONCLUSIONS: This population-based cohort study provides strong new evidence of a marked disparity between the proportion of the population with rare diseases and their combined health-system costs. The methodology will inform future rare-disease studies, and the evidence will guide government strategies for managing the service needs of people living with rare diseases.Genet Med advance online publication 22 September 2016Genetics in Medicine (2016); doi:10.1038/gim.2016.143.
- Published
- 2016
16. The risk of re-identification versus the need to identify individuals in rare disease research.
- Author
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Hansson, M., Lochmuller, H., Riess, O., Schaefer, F., Orth, M., Rubinstein, Y., Molster, C., Dawkins, Hugh, Taruscio, D., Posada, M., Woods, S., Hansson, M., Lochmuller, H., Riess, O., Schaefer, F., Orth, M., Rubinstein, Y., Molster, C., Dawkins, Hugh, Taruscio, D., Posada, M., and Woods, S.
- Published
- 2016
17. Use of mechanical airway clearance devices in the home by people with neuromuscular disorders: Effects on health service use and lifestyle benefits
- Author
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Mahede, T., Davis, G., Rutkay, A., Baxendale, S., Sun, W, Dawkins, H.J.S., Molster, C., Graham, C.E., Mahede, T., Davis, G., Rutkay, A., Baxendale, S., Sun, W, Dawkins, H.J.S., Molster, C., and Graham, C.E.
- Abstract
Background People with neuromuscular disorders (NMD) exhibit weak coughs and are susceptible to recurrent chest infections and acute respiratory complications, the most frequent reasons for their unplanned hospital admissions. Mechanical insufflation-exsufflation (MI-E) devices are a non-invasive method of increasing peak cough flow, improving cough efficacy, the clearance of secretion and overcoming atelectasis. There is limited published evidence on the impact of home use MI-E devices on health service utilisation. The aims of the study were: to assess the self-reported health and lifestyle benefits experienced as a result of home use of MI-E devices; and evaluate the effects of in-home use of MI-E devices on Emergency Department (ED) presentations, hospital admissions and inpatient length of stay (LOS). Methods Individuals with NMD who were accessing a home MI-E device provided through Muscular Dystrophy Western Australia were invited to participate in a quantitative survey to obtain information on their experiences and self-assessed changes in respiratory health. An ad-hoc record linkage was performed to extract hospital, ED and mortality data from the Western Australian Department of Health (DOHWA). The main outcome measures were ED presentations, hospital separations and LOS, before and after commencement of home use of an MI-E device. Results Thirty seven individuals with NMD using a MI-E device at home consented to participate in this study. The majority (73%) of participants reported using the MI-E device daily or weekly at home without medical assistance and 32% had used the machine to resolve a choking episode. The survey highlighted benefits to respiratory function maintenance and the ability to manage increased health care needs at home. Not using a home MI-E device was associated with an increased risk of ED presentations (RR = 1.76, 95% CI 1.1-2.84). The number of hospital separations and LOS reduced after the use of MI-E device, but not significantly
- Published
- 2015
18. Informing public health policy through deliberative public engagement: Perceived impact on participants and citizen-government relations
- Author
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Molster, C., Potts, A., McNamara, Beverley, Youngs, L., Maxwell, S., Dawkins, Hugh, O'Leary, Peter, Molster, C., Potts, A., McNamara, Beverley, Youngs, L., Maxwell, S., Dawkins, Hugh, and O'Leary, Peter
- Abstract
Background: Deliberative public engagement has been proposed for policy development, where issues are complex and there are diverse public perspectives and low awareness of competing issues. Scholars suggest a range of potential outcomes for citizens and government agencies from involvement in such processes. Few studies have examined outcomes from the perspective of citizen participants in deliberative processes. Aims: To examine participant perceptions of their involvement in and outcomes of a deliberative engagement exercise. Method: A case study using semistructured interviews was conducted with participants following a deliberative forum on biobanking. Results: From their involvement in the deliberative exercise, participants described transformations in their knowledge and beliefs about the policy issues. They reported being more informed to the extent of having confidence to educate others and effectively contribute to public policy development. They had developed greater trust in government policymakers who they believed would take reasonable account of their recommendations.Conclusion: We conclude that the participants were satisfied with the outcomes of the deliberative public engagement process and viewed it as an effective means of citizen involvement in public policy development. Particularly for citizens who participate in deliberative processes, such processes may promote active citizenship, empower citizens to undertake representative and educative roles, and improve relations between citizens and government agencies. Actions taken by policymakers subsequent to the deliberative exercise, whereby the majority of citizen recommendations were incorporated in the policy developed, may have contributed to participants holding sustained levels of trust in the commissioning government agency.
- Published
- 2013
19. Blueprint for a deliberative public forum on biobanking policy: Were theoretical principles achievable in practice?
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Molster, C., Maxwell, Susannah, Youngs, L., Kyne, G., Hope, F., Dawkins, Hugh, O'Leary, Peter, Molster, C., Maxwell, Susannah, Youngs, L., Kyne, G., Hope, F., Dawkins, Hugh, and O'Leary, Peter
- Abstract
Background: Public deliberation is recommended for obtaining citizeninput to policy development when policies involve contested ethicaldimensions, diverse perspectives on how to trade-off competing publicinterests and low public awareness of these perspectives. Several normshave been proposed for the design of deliberative methods. Evidence isscarce regarding whether such norms are achievable in practice.Purpose: This paper refers to principles of deliberative democracytheory to describe a deliberative public forum on biobanking.Practical challenges and contextual facilitators of achieving deliberativeideals are discussed, along with factors that influenced use ofthe forum output in policy development.Method: The forumranfor4 daysovertwoweekends inPerth,WesternAustralia. Key methodological features were socio-demographic stratificationto randomly recruit a mini-public of citizens for discursiverepresentation,provisionof informationinclusiveofdiverseperspectivesand framed for difference, provision of a fair way for reasoning andcollectivedecisionmakingandadoptionofprocessestoachievepublicity,accountability and independence from undue institutional influence.Results: Most design principles were achieved in practice, with thefundamental exception of representativeness. Factors influencingthese outcomes, and the use of deliberated outputs to develop policy,included institutional characteristics, the design involvement ofdeliberative experts and quality of the outputs when compared toother consultation methods.Conclusions: Public deliberations can achieve design ideals andinfluence (ethics-based) public health policy. The representation ofhard to reach citizens and their views needs further consideration,particularly as this relates to the procedural legitimacy of ethicalanalyses and the just inclusion of deliberative citizen advice withinthe broader policy-making process.
- Published
- 2013
20. An Australian approach to the policy translation of deliberated citizen perspectives on biobanking
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Molster, C., Maxwell, Susannah, Youngs, L., Potts, A., Kyne, G., Hope, F., Dawkins, Hugh, O'Leary, Peter, Molster, C., Maxwell, Susannah, Youngs, L., Potts, A., Kyne, G., Hope, F., Dawkins, Hugh, and O'Leary, Peter
- Abstract
Background: Deliberative public engagement is recommendedfor policy development in contested ethical areas.Scholars provide little guidance on how deliberative outputscan be translated to policy. This paper describes the processeswe undertook to design a deliberative public forum forcitizens to develop recommendations on biobanking thatwere adopted as health policy. Method: The 4-day forum,held in 2008 in Perth, Western Australia, was designed in collaborationwith academic experts. Deliberant recommendationswere recorded in a formal report presented to policymakers.Deliberations were audio-taped and transcribed.Translation involved transcript analyses, comparison of recommendationsto other stakeholder views and post-forumconsultations. Results: Sixteen citizens made recommendationson ethical, legal and social issues related to biobanking.Most recommendations were translated into biobankingguidelines, with which Western Australia government healthagencies must comply. The value of deliberative public participationin policy-making was most evident when tradeoffsin competing interests, hopes and concerns were required. Translation issues included the impact of a smallnumber of participants with limited socio-demographic diversityon procedural and policy legitimacy. Conclusions:Assessing the sufficiency of diversity in citizen representationwas central to the deliberation-to-translation process.Institutional context facilitated the uptake of deliberationand translation processes. The use of these processes influencedpolicy substance and credibility among stakeholdersand contributed to the state government directive that policycompliance be mandatory. We urge others to publish deliberation-to-translation processes so that best-practicesmay be identified.
- Published
- 2012
21. Motivating intentions to adopt risk-reducing behaviours for chronic diseases: Impact of a public health tool for collecting family health histories
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Molster, C., Kyne, G., O'Leary, Peter, Molster, C., Kyne, G., and O'Leary, Peter
- Published
- 2011
22. Perceptions of Population Cystic Fibrosis Prenatal and Preconception Carrier Screening Among Individuals with Cystic Fibrosis and Their Family Members
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Maxwell, Susannah, Kyne, G., Molster, C., Barker, N., Ormsby, J., O'Leary, Peter, Maxwell, Susannah, Kyne, G., Molster, C., Barker, N., Ormsby, J., and O'Leary, Peter
- Published
- 2011
23. Communicating Familial Hypercholesterolemia Genetic Information Within Families
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Maxwell, Susannah, Molster, C., Poke, S., O'Leary, Peter, Maxwell, Susannah, Molster, C., Poke, S., and O'Leary, Peter
- Published
- 2009
24. A survey of folate knowledge and consumer behaviours in Western Australia prior to the introduction of mandatory food fortification
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Molster, C., Samanek, A., Bower, C., O'Leary, Peter, Molster, C., Samanek, A., Bower, C., and O'Leary, Peter
- Published
- 2009
25. Australian Study on Public Knowledge of Human Genetics and Health
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Molster, C., primary, Charles, T., additional, Samanek, A., additional, and O’Leary, P., additional
- Published
- 2008
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26. Motivating intentions to adopt risk-reducing behaviours for chronic diseases: impact of a public health tool for collecting family health histories.
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Molster C, Kyne G, O'Leary P, Molster, Caron, Kyne, Gaenor, and O'Leary, Peter
- Abstract
Issues Addressed: In the genomics era the use of valid and reliable tools for the collection of family health histories is proposed as a strategy for identifying those at higher risk of chronic disease and increasing the adoption of risk-modifying behaviours.This study investigated the impact of a collection tool for a Family Health History Program in Western Australia upon uptake of key health messages and intentions to adopt risk-reducing behaviours for chronic diseases.Methods: Initially a baseline population survey (n=1009) was undertaken to assess the collection of family health histories among adults and identify target populations for the tool. A targeted intercept survey (n=606) was then conducted with women to assess the tool.Results: Around half the respondents indicated they were motivated to adopt one or more risk-reducing behaviours as a result of their exposure to the tool.The odds of being motivated to do something related to family health history were significantly greater for women who liked the too (AdjOR=3.1,95%Cl 2.1 4.5 ), thought it conveyed useful information (AdjOR=5.0, 95%Cl 2.6-9.6), perceived family history to be more important than before they read the tool (AdjOR=3.4, 95%Cl 2.3-4.9) and had not previously collected family health history information (AdjOR=1.8, 95%Cl 1.1-3.0).Conclusion: At a whole-of-population level most adults consider family health history important, but few have actually recorded this information. The tool raised awareness of the importance of family health histories to personal health and was considered personally useful by most respondents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
27. Key outcomes from stakeholder workshops at a symposium to inform the development of an Australian national plan for rare diseases
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Molster Caron, Youngs Leanne, Hammond Emma, and Dawkins Hugh
- Subjects
National plan ,Rare diseases ,Stakeholder consultation ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Calls have been made for governments to adopt a cohesive approach to rare diseases through the development of national plans. At present, Australia does not have a national plan for rare diseases. To progress such a plan an inaugural Australian Rare Diseases Symposium was held in Western Australia in April 2011. This paper describes the key issues identified by symposium attendees for the development of a national plan, compares these to the content of EUROPLAN and national plans elsewhere and discusses how the outcomes might be integrated for national planning. Methods The symposium was comprised of a series of plenary sessions followed by workshops. The topics covered were; 1) Development of national plans for rare diseases; 2) Patient empowerment; 3) Patient care, support and management; 4) Research and translation; 5) Networks, partnerships and collaboration. All stakeholders within the rare diseases community were invited to participate, including: people affected by rare diseases such as patients, carers, and families; clinicians and allied health practitioners; social and disability services; researchers; patient support groups; industry (e.g. pharmaceutical, biotechnology and medical device companies); regulators and policy-makers. Results All of these stakeholder groups were represented at the symposium. Workshop participants indicated the need for a national plan, a national peak body, a standard definition of ‘rare diseases’, education campaigns, lobbying of government, research infrastructure, streamlined whole-of-lifetime service provision, case co-ordination, early diagnosis, support for health professionals and dedicated funding. Conclusions These findings are consistent with frameworks and initiatives being undertaken internationally (such as EUROPLAN), and with national plans in other countries. This implies that the development of an Australian national plan could plausibly draw on frameworks for plan development that have been proposed for use in other jurisdictions. The translation of the symposium outcomes to government policy (i.e. a national plan) requires the consideration of several factors such as the under-representation of some stakeholder groups (e.g. clinicians) and the current lack of evidence required to translate some of the symposium outcomes to policy options. The acquisition of evidence provides a necessary first step in a comprehensive planning approach.
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- 2012
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28. Awakening Australia to Rare Diseases: Symposium report and preliminary outcomes
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Molster Caron M, Dawkins Hugh JS, Youngs Leanne M, and O'Leary Peter C
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Medicine - Published
- 2011
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29. The diagnostic odyssey: insights from parents of children living with an undiagnosed condition.
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Bauskis A, Strange C, Molster C, and Fisher C
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Uridine Diphosphate, Western Australia, Young Adult, Parents, Rare Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: People living with rare disease often have protracted journeys towards diagnosis. In the last decade, programs have arisen around the world that are dedicated to ending this 'diagnostic odyssey', including the Undiagnosed Diseases Program Western Australia (UDP-WA), which has a focus on finding diagnoses for children and young adults. To explore the lived experience of the diagnostic journey semi-structured interviews were conducted with parents of 11 children at commencement of their involvement in the UDP-WA., Results: Thematic analysis revealed three main themes that captured parents' experiences and perspectives. Parents reported (i) the need to respond to significant care needs of their children, which span not only the health system but other systems such as education and disability services. In doing so, parents become the navigator, expert and advocate for their children. Meanwhile, parents are on (ii) the diagnostic odyssey-the rollercoaster of their journey towards diagnosis, which includes various names applied to their child's condition, and the impact of no diagnosis. Parents described their views on (iii) the value of a diagnosis and the outcomes they expect to be associated with a diagnosis., Conclusion: Analysis showed an overall significant perceived value of a diagnosis. Our study provides new perspectives on the concept of diagnosis and indicates that parents may benefit from supports for their child's care needs that are beyond the scope of the UDP-WA., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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30. Measuring the impact of genetic knowledge on intentions and attitudes of the community towards expanded preconception carrier screening.
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Ong R, Howting D, Rea A, Christian H, Charman P, Molster C, Ravenscroft G, and Laing NG
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- Adult, Australia epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Decision Making, Demography, Female, Genetic Counseling, Genetic Testing, Humans, Male, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Public Health Surveillance, Socioeconomic Factors, Community Health Services, Genetic Carrier Screening, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Intention, Preconception Care
- Abstract
Background: Preconception carrier screening (PCS) provides the potential to empower couples to make reproductive choices before having an affected child. An important question is what factors influence the decision to use or not use PCS., Methods: We analysed the relationship between knowledge, attitudes and intentions to participate in PCS using logistic regression in 832 participants in Western Australia., Results: Two-thirds of participants said they would take the test, with 92% of these supporting screening for diseases reducing the lifespan of children and infants. Those who had good genetic knowledge were seven times more likely to intend to use PCS (p≤0.001), while those with high genetic knowledge were four times more likely to (p=0.002) and raised concerns such as insurance and confidentiality.Decreasing genetic knowledge correlated positively with religiosity and apprehension (p≤0.001), which correlated negatively with intention to use PCS (p≤0.001). Increasing genetic knowledge correlated positively with factors representing positive attitudes (p≤0.001), which correlated positively with intention to use PCS (p≤0.001). Many participants with good genetic knowledge nevertheless answered questions that tested understanding incorrectly.80% of participants stated they would prefer to access the test through their general practitioners and 30% would pay up to $A200., Conclusions: Knowledge is instrumental in influencing participation. Having good genetic knowledge may not be enough to understand core concepts of PCS and may impact informed decision-making. This study recommends that continuous education of health professionals and thus the community, in PCS is crucial to reduce misconceptions., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2018. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2018
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31. Changes to the Employers' Use of Genetic Information and Non-discrimination for Health Insurance in the USA: Implications for Australians.
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Bilkey GA, Baynam G, and Molster C
- Abstract
In the USA, a bill has been introduced to the senate that may jeopardize an individual's rights to privacy and non-discrimination. This piece examines the proposed Preserving Employee Wellness Programs Act (PEWPA), and implications this will have on the use of genetic information. The Act allows for employers to apply financial penalties for health insurance based on genetic information, which raises concerns as the capacity to interpret genetic results is limited by knowledge of the significance of both benign and pathogenic variants. In Australia, genetic information can only be used to determine life insurance, not to stratify health insurance, and any precedent set internationally should raise concerns of the potential for change on the horizon.
- Published
- 2018
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32. Initiating an undiagnosed diseases program in the Western Australian public health system.
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Baynam G, Broley S, Bauskis A, Pachter N, McKenzie F, Townshend S, Slee J, Kiraly-Borri C, Vasudevan A, Hawkins A, Schofield L, Helmholz P, Palmer R, Kung S, Walker CE, Molster C, Lewis B, Mina K, Beilby J, Pathak G, Poulton C, Groza T, Zankl A, Roscioli T, Dinger ME, Mattick JS, Gahl W, Groft S, Tifft C, Taruscio D, Lasko P, Kosaki K, Wilhelm H, Melegh B, Carapetis J, Jana S, Chaney G, Johns A, Owen PW, Daly F, Weeramanthri T, Dawkins H, and Goldblatt J
- Subjects
- Genomics, Humans, Proteomics, Western Australia, Health Planning organization & administration, Public Health methods
- Abstract
Background: New approaches are required to address the needs of complex undiagnosed diseases patients. These approaches include clinical genomic diagnostic pipelines, utilizing intra- and multi-disciplinary platforms, as well as specialty-specific genomic clinics. Both are advancing diagnostic rates. However, complementary cross-disciplinary approaches are also critical to address those patients with multisystem disorders who traverse the bounds of multiple specialties and remain undiagnosed despite existing intra-specialty and genomic-focused approaches. The diagnostic possibilities of undiagnosed diseases include genetic and non-genetic conditions. The focus on genetic diseases addresses some of these disorders, however a cross-disciplinary approach is needed that also simultaneously addresses other disorder types. Herein, we describe the initiation and summary outcomes of a public health system approach for complex undiagnosed patients - the Undiagnosed Diseases Program-Western Australia (UDP-WA)., Results: Briefly the UDP-WA is: i) one of a complementary suite of approaches that is being delivered within health service, and with community engagement, to address the needs of those with severe undiagnosed diseases; ii) delivered within a public health system to support equitable access to health care, including for those from remote and regional areas; iii) providing diagnoses and improved patient care; iv) delivering a platform for in-service and real time genomic and phenomic education for clinicians that traverses a diverse range of specialties; v) retaining and recapturing clinical expertise; vi) supporting the education of junior and more senior medical staff; vii) designed to integrate with clinical translational research; and viii) is supporting greater connectedness for patients, families and medical staff., Conclusion: The UDP-WA has been initiated in the public health system to complement existing clinical genomic approaches; it has been targeted to those with a specific diagnostic need, and initiated by redirecting existing clinical and financial resources. The UDP-WA supports the provision of equitable and sustainable diagnostics and simultaneously supports capacity building in clinical care and translational research, for those with undiagnosed, typically rare, conditions.
- Published
- 2017
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33. The collective impact of rare diseases in Western Australia: an estimate using a population-based cohort.
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Walker CE, Mahede T, Davis G, Miller LJ, Girschik J, Brameld K, Sun W, Rath A, Aymé S, Zubrick SR, Baynam GS, Molster C, Dawkins HJS, and Weeramanthri TS
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Health Services statistics & numerical data, Humans, Information Storage and Retrieval economics, Middle Aged, Rare Diseases economics, Retrospective Studies, Western Australia epidemiology, Young Adult, Health Services economics, Length of Stay economics, Rare Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Purpose: It has been argued that rare diseases should be recognized as a public health priority. However, there is a shortage of epidemiological data describing the true burden of rare diseases. This study investigated hospital service use to provide a better understanding of the collective health and economic impacts of rare diseases., Methods: Novel methodology was developed using a carefully constructed set of diagnostic codes, a selection of rare disease cohorts from hospital administrative data, and advanced data-linkage technologies. Outcomes included health-service use and hospital admission costs., Results: In 2010, cohort members who were alive represented approximately 2.0% of the Western Australian population. The cohort accounted for 4.6% of people discharged from hospital and 9.9% of hospital discharges, and it had a greater average length of stay than the general population. The total cost of hospital discharges for the cohort represented 10.5% of 2010 state inpatient hospital costs., Conclusions: This population-based cohort study provides strong new evidence of a marked disparity between the proportion of the population with rare diseases and their combined health-system costs. The methodology will inform future rare-disease studies, and the evidence will guide government strategies for managing the service needs of people living with rare diseases.Genet Med advance online publication 22 September 2016.
- Published
- 2017
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34. Improved Diagnosis and Care for Rare Diseases through Implementation of Precision Public Health Framework.
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Baynam G, Bowman F, Lister K, Walker CE, Pachter N, Goldblatt J, Boycott KM, Gahl WA, Kosaki K, Adachi T, Ishii K, Mahede T, McKenzie F, Townshend S, Slee J, Kiraly-Borri C, Vasudevan A, Hawkins A, Broley S, Schofield L, Verhoef H, Groza T, Zankl A, Robinson PN, Haendel M, Brudno M, Mattick JS, Dinger ME, Roscioli T, Cowley MJ, Olry A, Hanauer M, Alkuraya FS, Taruscio D, Posada de la Paz M, Lochmüller H, Bushby K, Thompson R, Hedley V, Lasko P, Mina K, Beilby J, Tifft C, Davis M, Laing NG, Julkowska D, Le Cam Y, Terry SF, Kaufmann P, Eerola I, Norstedt I, Rath A, Suematsu M, Groft SC, Austin CP, Draghia-Akli R, Weeramanthri TS, Molster C, and Dawkins HJS
- Subjects
- Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genomics organization & administration, Humans, Phenotype, Policy Making, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Program Development, Program Evaluation, Rare Diseases diagnosis, Rare Diseases epidemiology, Rare Diseases genetics, Genomics methods, Health Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Precision Medicine, Public Health legislation & jurisprudence, Rare Diseases therapy
- Abstract
Public health relies on technologies to produce and analyse data, as well as effectively develop and implement policies and practices. An example is the public health practice of epidemiology, which relies on computational technology to monitor the health status of populations, identify disadvantaged or at risk population groups and thereby inform health policy and priority setting. Critical to achieving health improvements for the underserved population of people living with rare diseases is early diagnosis and best care. In the rare diseases field, the vast majority of diseases are caused by destructive but previously difficult to identify protein-coding gene mutations. The reduction in cost of genetic testing and advances in the clinical use of genome sequencing, data science and imaging are converging to provide more precise understandings of the 'person-time-place' triad. That is: who is affected (people); when the disease is occurring (time); and where the disease is occurring (place). Consequently we are witnessing a paradigm shift in public health policy and practice towards 'precision public health'.Patient and stakeholder engagement has informed the need for a national public health policy framework for rare diseases. The engagement approach in different countries has produced highly comparable outcomes and objectives. Knowledge and experience sharing across the international rare diseases networks and partnerships has informed the development of the Western Australian Rare Diseases Strategic Framework 2015-2018 (RD Framework) and Australian government health briefings on the need for a National plan.The RD Framework is guiding the translation of genomic and other technologies into the Western Australian health system, leading to greater precision in diagnostic pathways and care, and is an example of how a precision public health framework can improve health outcomes for the rare diseases population.Five vignettes are used to illustrate how policy decisions provide the scaffolding for translation of new genomics knowledge, and catalyze transformative change in delivery of clinical services. The vignettes presented here are from an Australian perspective and are not intended to be comprehensive, but rather to provide insights into how a new and emerging 'precision public health' paradigm can improve the experiences of patients living with rare diseases, their caregivers and families.The conclusion is that genomic public health is informed by the individual and family needs, and the population health imperatives of an early and accurate diagnosis; which is the portal to best practice care. Knowledge sharing is critical for public health policy development and improving the lives of people living with rare diseases.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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35. Indigenous Genetics and Rare Diseases: Harmony, Diversity and Equity.
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Baynam G, Molster C, Bauskis A, Kowal E, Savarirayan R, Kelaher M, Easteal S, Massey L, Garvey G, Goldblatt J, Pachter N, Weeramanthri TS, and Dawkins HJS
- Subjects
- Australia epidemiology, Genetic Counseling, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetic Testing, Health Services Accessibility, Humans, Phenotype, Prognosis, Rare Diseases diagnosis, Rare Diseases ethnology, Rare Diseases therapy, Risk Factors, Genetic Variation, Health Services, Indigenous, Healthcare Disparities, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander genetics, Rare Diseases genetics
- Abstract
Advances in our understanding of genetic and rare diseases are changing the face of healthcare. Crucially, the global community must implement these advances equitably to reduce health disparities, including between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples. We take an Australian perspective to illustrate some key areas that are fundamental to the equitable translation of new knowledge for the improved diagnosis of genetic and rare diseases for Indigenous people. Specifically, we focus on inequalities in access to clinical genetics services and the lack of genetic and phenomic reference data to inform diagnoses. We provide examples of ways in which these inequities are being addressed through Australian partnerships to support a harmonious and inclusive approach to ensure that benefits from traditional wisdom, community knowledge and shared experiences are interwoven to support and inform implementation of new knowledge from genomics and precision public health. This will serve to deliver benefits to all of our diverse citizens, including Indigenous populations.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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36. The risk of re-identification versus the need to identify individuals in rare disease research.
- Author
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Hansson MG, Lochmüller H, Riess O, Schaefer F, Orth M, Rubinstein Y, Molster C, Dawkins H, Taruscio D, Posada M, and Woods S
- Subjects
- Biomedical Research ethics, Biomedical Research legislation & jurisprudence, Biomedical Research methods, Genetic Privacy legislation & jurisprudence, Genetic Testing legislation & jurisprudence, Genetic Testing methods, Humans, Rare Diseases diagnosis, Genetic Privacy ethics, Genetic Testing ethics, International Cooperation, Rare Diseases genetics
- Abstract
There is a growing concern in the ethics literature and among policy makers that de-identification or coding of personal data and biospecimens is not sufficient for protecting research subjects from privacy invasions and possible breaches of confidentiality due to the possibility of unauthorized re-identification. At the same time, there is a need in medical science to be able to identify individual patients. In particular for rare disease research there is a special and well-documented need for research collaboration so that data and biosamples from multiple independent studies can be shared across borders. In this article, we identify the needs and arguments related to de-identification and re-identification of patients and research subjects and suggest how the different needs may be balanced within a framework of using unique encrypted identifiers.
- Published
- 2016
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37. 'You should at least ask'. The expectations, hopes and fears of rare disease patients on large-scale data and biomaterial sharing for genomics research.
- Author
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McCormack P, Kole A, Gainotti S, Mascalzoni D, Molster C, Lochmüller H, and Woods S
- Subjects
- Databases, Factual, European Union, Genome-Wide Association Study standards, Humans, Information Dissemination ethics, Knowledge of Results, Psychological, United States, Genome-Wide Association Study ethics, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Rare Diseases psychology
- Abstract
Within the myriad articles about participants' opinions of genomics research, the views of a distinct group - people with a rare disease (RD) - are unknown. It is important to understand if their opinions differ from the general public by dint of having a rare disease and vulnerabilities inherent in this. Here we document RD patients' attitudes to participation in genomics research, particularly around large-scale, international data and biosample sharing. This work is unique in exploring the views of people with a range of rare disorders from many different countries. The authors work within an international, multidisciplinary consortium, RD-Connect, which has developed an integrated platform connecting databases, registries, biobanks and clinical bioinformatics for RD research. Focus groups were conducted with 52 RD patients from 16 countries. Using a scenario-based approach, participants were encouraged to raise topics relevant to their own experiences, rather than these being determined by the researcher. Issues include wide data sharing, and consent for new uses of historic samples and for children. Focus group members are positively disposed towards research and towards allowing data and biosamples to be shared internationally. Expressions of trust and attitudes to risk are often affected by the nature of the RD which they have experience of, as well as regulatory and cultural practices in their home country. Participants are concerned about data security and misuse. There is an acute recognition of the vulnerability inherent in having a RD and the possibility that open knowledge of this could lead to discrimination.
- Published
- 2016
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38. The rare and undiagnosed diseases diagnostic service - application of massively parallel sequencing in a state-wide clinical service.
- Author
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Baynam G, Pachter N, McKenzie F, Townshend S, Slee J, Kiraly-Borri C, Vasudevan A, Hawkins A, Broley S, Schofield L, Verhoef H, Walker CE, Molster C, Blackwell JM, Jamieson S, Tang D, Lassmann T, Mina K, Beilby J, Davis M, Laing N, Murphy L, Weeramanthri T, Dawkins H, and Goldblatt J
- Subjects
- Australia, Delivery of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Genomics methods, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Diagnostic Services, Rare Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: The Rare and Undiagnosed Diseases Diagnostic Service (RUDDS) refers to a genomic diagnostic platform operating within the Western Australian Government clinical services delivered through Genetic Services of Western Australia (GSWA). GSWA has provided a state-wide service for clinical genetic care for 28 years and it serves a population of 2.5 million people across a geographical area of 2.5milion Km(2). Within this context, GSWA has established a clinically integrated genomic diagnostic platform in partnership with other public health system managers and service providers, including but not limited to the Office of Population Health Genomics, Diagnostic Genomics (PathWest Laboratories) and with executive level support from the Department of Health. Herein we describe report presents the components of this service that are most relevant to the heterogeneity of paediatric clinical genetic care., Results: Briefly the platform : i) offers multiple options including non-genetic testing; monogenic and genomic (targeted in silico filtered and whole exome) analysis; and matchmaking; ii) is delivered in a patient-centric manner that is resonant with the patient journey, it has multiple points for entry, exit and re-entry to allow people access to information they can use, when they want to receive it; iii) is synchronous with precision phenotyping methods; iv) captures new knowledge, including multiple expert review; v) is integrated with current translational genomic research activities and best practice; and vi) is designed for flexibility for interactive generation of, and integration with, clinical research for diagnostics, community engagement, policy and models of care., Conclusion: The RUDDS has been established as part of routine clinical genetic services and is thus sustainable, equitably managed and seeks to translate new knowledge into efficient diagnostics and improved health for the whole community.
- Published
- 2016
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39. Survey of healthcare experiences of Australian adults living with rare diseases.
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Molster C, Urwin D, Di Pietro L, Fookes M, Petrie D, van der Laan S, and Dawkins H
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Australia, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Delivery of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Rare Diseases
- Abstract
Background: Few studies have examined whether the healthcare needs of people living with rare diseases are being met. This study explores the experiences of Australian adults living with rare diseases in relation to diagnosis, information provision at the time of diagnosis, use of health and support services and involvement in research on their condition., Methods: The survey respondents are self-selected from the population of Australian residents aged 18 years and over who are living with a rare disease. An online survey was implemented between July-August 2014. Purposive snowballing sampling was used. The results are reported as percentages with significant differences between sub-groups assessed using chi-squared analyses., Results: Eight hundred ten responses were obtained from adults living with a rare disease. 92.1% had a confirmed diagnosis, of which 30.0% waited five or more years for a diagnosis, 66.2% had seen three or more doctors to get a diagnosis and 45.9% had received at least one incorrect diagnosis. Almost three quarters (72.1%) received no or not enough information at the time of diagnosis. In the 12 months prior to the survey, over 80% of respondents had used the services of a general practitioner and a medical specialist while around a third had been inpatients at a hospital or had visited an emergency department. Only 15.4% of respondents had ever used paediatric services, 52.8% of these had experienced problems in the transition from paediatric to adult services. Only 20.3% knew of a patient registry for their condition and 24.8% were informed of clinical trials., Conclusions: These findings suggest that not all healthcare needs of people living with rare diseases are being met. Structural changes to Australian healthcare systems may be required to improve the integration and coordination of diagnosis and care. Health professionals may need greater awareness of rare diseases to improve the diagnostic process and support to meet the information requirements of people newly diagnosed with rare diseases. Health service use is likely higher than for the general population and further epidemiological studies are needed on the impact of rare diseases on the healthcare system.
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- 2016
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40. Use of mechanical airway clearance devices in the home by people with neuromuscular disorders: effects on health service use and lifestyle benefits.
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Mahede T, Davis G, Rutkay A, Baxendale S, Sun W, Dawkins HJ, Molster C, and Graham CE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Safety, Young Adult, Airway Obstruction etiology, Airway Obstruction therapy, Insufflation instrumentation, Life Style, Neuromuscular Diseases complications
- Abstract
Background: People with neuromuscular disorders (NMD) exhibit weak coughs and are susceptible to recurrent chest infections and acute respiratory complications, the most frequent reasons for their unplanned hospital admissions. Mechanical insufflation-exsufflation (MI-E) devices are a non-invasive method of increasing peak cough flow, improving cough efficacy, the clearance of secretion and overcoming atelectasis. There is limited published evidence on the impact of home use MI-E devices on health service utilisation. The aims of the study were: to assess the self-reported health and lifestyle benefits experienced as a result of home use of MI-E devices; and evaluate the effects of in-home use of MI-E devices on Emergency Department (ED) presentations, hospital admissions and inpatient length of stay (LOS)., Methods: Individuals with NMD who were accessing a home MI-E device provided through Muscular Dystrophy Western Australia were invited to participate in a quantitative survey to obtain information on their experiences and self-assessed changes in respiratory health. An ad-hoc record linkage was performed to extract hospital, ED and mortality data from the Western Australian Department of Health (DOHWA). The main outcome measures were ED presentations, hospital separations and LOS, before and after commencement of home use of an MI-E device., Results: Thirty seven individuals with NMD using a MI-E device at home consented to participate in this study. The majority (73%) of participants reported using the MI-E device daily or weekly at home without medical assistance and 32% had used the machine to resolve a choking episode. The survey highlighted benefits to respiratory function maintenance and the ability to manage increased health care needs at home. Not using a home MI-E device was associated with an increased risk of ED presentations (RR = 1.76, 95% CI 1.1-2.84). The number of hospital separations and LOS reduced after the use of MI-E device, but not significantly. No deaths were observed in participants using the MI-E device at home., Conclusions: Home use of a MI-E device by people living with NMD may have a potential impact on reducing their health service utilisation and risk of death. Future research with greater subject numbers and longer follow-up periods is recommended to enhance this field of study.
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- 2015
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41. Informing public health policy through deliberative public engagement: perceived impact on participants and citizen-government relations.
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Molster C, Potts A, McNamara B, Youngs L, Maxwell S, Dawkins H, and O'Leary P
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- Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Health Policy, Patient Education as Topic, Policy Making
- Abstract
Background: Deliberative public engagement has been proposed for policy development, where issues are complex and there are diverse public perspectives and low awareness of competing issues. Scholars suggest a range of potential outcomes for citizens and government agencies from involvement in such processes. Few studies have examined outcomes from the perspective of citizen participants in deliberative processes., Aims: To examine participant perceptions of their involvement in and outcomes of a deliberative engagement exercise., Method: A case study using semistructured interviews was conducted with participants following a deliberative forum on biobanking., Results: From their involvement in the deliberative exercise, participants described transformations in their knowledge and beliefs about the policy issues. They reported being more informed to the extent of having confidence to educate others and effectively contribute to public policy development. They had developed greater trust in government policymakers who they believed would take reasonable account of their recommendations., Conclusion: We conclude that the participants were satisfied with the outcomes of the deliberative public engagement process and viewed it as an effective means of citizen involvement in public policy development. Particularly for citizens who participate in deliberative processes, such processes may promote active citizenship, empower citizens to undertake representative and educative roles, and improve relations between citizens and government agencies. Actions taken by policymakers subsequent to the deliberative exercise, whereby the majority of citizen recommendations were incorporated in the policy developed, may have contributed to participants holding sustained levels of trust in the commissioning government agency.
- Published
- 2013
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42. Blueprint for a deliberative public forum on biobanking policy: were theoretical principles achievable in practice?
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Molster C, Maxwell S, Youngs L, Kyne G, Hope F, Dawkins H, and O'Leary P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Health Policy, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Public Opinion, Social Responsibility, Western Australia, Young Adult, Biological Specimen Banks organization & administration, Community Participation, Policy Making
- Abstract
Background: Public deliberation is recommended for obtaining citizen input to policy development when policies involve contested ethical dimensions, diverse perspectives on how to trade-off competing public interests and low public awareness of these perspectives. Several norms have been proposed for the design of deliberative methods. Evidence is scarce regarding whether such norms are achievable in practice., Purpose: This paper refers to principles of deliberative democracy theory to describe a deliberative public forum on biobanking. Practical challenges and contextual facilitators of achieving deliberative ideals are discussed, along with factors that influenced use of the forum output in policy development., Method: The forum ran for 4 days over two weekends in Perth, Western Australia. Key methodological features were socio-demographic stratification to randomly recruit a mini-public of citizens for discursive representation, provision of information inclusive of diverse perspectives and framed for difference, provision of a fair way for reasoning and collective decision making and adoption of processes to achieve publicity, accountability and independence from undue institutional influence., Results: Most design principles were achieved in practice, with the fundamental exception of representativeness. Factors influencing these outcomes, and the use of deliberated outputs to develop policy, included institutional characteristics, the design involvement of deliberative experts and quality of the outputs when compared to other consultation methods., Conclusions: Public deliberations can achieve design ideals and influence (ethics-based) public health policy. The representation of 'hard to reach' citizens and their views needs further consideration, particularly as this relates to the procedural legitimacy of ethical analyses and the just inclusion of deliberative citizen advice within the broader policy-making process., (© 2011 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2013
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43. An Australian approach to the policy translation of deliberated citizen perspectives on biobanking.
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Molster C, Maxwell S, Youngs L, Potts A, Kyne G, Hope F, Dawkins H, and O'Leary P
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- Expert Testimony, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Western Australia, Biological Specimen Banks ethics, Biological Specimen Banks legislation & jurisprudence, Community Participation, Policy Making, Public Opinion
- Abstract
Background: Deliberative public engagement is recommended for policy development in contested ethical areas. Scholars provide little guidance on how deliberative outputs can be translated to policy. This paper describes the processes we undertook to design a deliberative public forum for citizens to develop recommendations on biobanking that were adopted as health policy., Method: The 4-day forum, held in 2008 in Perth, Western Australia, was designed in collaboration with academic experts. Deliberant recommendations were recorded in a formal report presented to policy-makers. Deliberations were audio-taped and transcribed. Translation involved transcript analyses, comparison of recommendations to other stakeholder views and post-forum consultations., Results: Sixteen citizens made recommendations on ethical, legal and social issues related to biobanking. Most recommendations were translated into biobanking guidelines, with which Western Australia government health agencies must comply. The value of deliberative public participation in policy-making was most evident when trade-offs in competing interests, hopes and concerns were required. Translation issues included the impact of a small number of participants with limited socio-demographic diversity on procedural and policy legitimacy., Conclusions: Assessing the sufficiency of diversity in citizen representation was central to the deliberation-to-translation process. Institutional context facilitated the uptake of deliberation and translation processes. The use of these processes influenced policy substance and credibility among stakeholders and contributed to the state government directive that policy compliance be mandatory. We urge others to publish deliberation-to-translation processes so that best-practices may be identified., (Copyright © 2011 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
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- 2012
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44. Perceptions of population cystic fibrosis prenatal and preconception carrier screening among individuals with cystic fibrosis and their family members.
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Maxwell SJ, Kyne G, Molster C, Barker NM, Ormsby J, and O'Leary P
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cystic Fibrosis genetics, Cystic Fibrosis prevention & control, Female, Health Care Surveys, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Neonatal Screening, Preconception Care, Pregnancy, Prenatal Care, Western Australia, Young Adult, Attitude to Health, Cystic Fibrosis diagnosis, Cystic Fibrosis psychology, Family psychology, Genetic Carrier Screening, Genetic Testing psychology
- Abstract
Aim: Our study aimed to quantitatively explore the perceptions of individuals with cystic fibrosis (CF) and their family members toward population prenatal and preconception CF carrier screening, including perceived benefits, concerns, and the acceptability of offering screening., Method: In November 2009, 258 members of the Cystic Fibrosis Association of Western Australia were invited via an e-mail newsletter to participate in a survey, with a link to an online survey tool. A further 246 members without e-mail access were mailed a paper copy of the survey., Results: Overall, we found the majority of individuals with CF (n=27) and their families (n=122) had positive views of population CF carrier screening. However, the small number of individuals with CF represented in the study limits the interpretation of these data., Conclusion: From a public policy perspective, our findings overall suggest that in principle the views of family members are not a barrier to the introduction of population CF carrier screening. The views of individuals with CF warrant further investigation. Data such as ours should be used with other sources of information, such as economic evaluations and the perceptions of the general public, geneticists, and other medical practitioners to inform decisions regarding screening within the public health system.
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- 2011
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45. A survey of folate knowledge and consumer behaviours in Western Australia prior to the introduction of mandatory food fortification.
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Molster C, Samanek A, Bower C, and O'Leary P
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Data Collection, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Western Australia, Young Adult, Folic Acid administration & dosage, Folic Acid adverse effects, Food, Fortified, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Mandatory Programs
- Abstract
Objectives: Prior to the introduction of mandatory folic acid fortification in September 2009, this study collected baseline data on folate awareness, knowledge of pregnancy-relevant public health messages and consumer behaviours in Western Australia., Methods: One thousand residents aged 18 years or older participated in a cross sectional telephone survey in September 2006. Respondents were recruited randomly from the electronic residential telephone directory., Results: Most respondents reported knowing little or nothing about folate (86%). Women of childbearing age were more likely than other adults to know the association between folate intake and birth defects (82% v 56%) but 41% did not know that folate should be consumed periconceptionally to reduce the risk of spina bifida. Overall, half the respondents did not take supplements and two-thirds did not know if the food products they ate were fortified with folic acid. Associations were detected between knowledge, consumer behaviours and socio-economic indicators such as age, income, highest level of education, area of residence and parental status., Implications: A mix of public health strategies that includes mandatory fortification and the promotion of supplement use should improve the timely and sufficient intake of folate across all socio-economic strata of the Australian population. Strategies that support the introduction of mandatory fortification, such as awareness and education campaigns should be built on a solid understanding of the drivers and barriers to knowledge acquisition and desired consumer behaviours.
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- 2009
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46. Australian survey on community knowledge and attitudes regarding the fortification of food with folic acid.
- Author
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Molster C, Bower C, and O'Leary P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Australia, Bread analysis, Data Collection, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Neural Tube Defects prevention & control, Neural Tube Defects psychology, Pregnancy, Folic Acid administration & dosage, Food, Fortified analysis, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
- Abstract
Background: In response to the proposal that mandatory fortification be introduced in Australia to reduce the incidence of NTDs, the purpose of this study was to establish, for the adult community, baseline data on knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors towards the fortification of foods with folic acid., Methods: A cross-sectional, Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing survey with respondents recruited randomly from the electronic version of the Western Australian telephone directory was used. One thousand members of the community aged 18 years or older were interviewed for the study., Results: Interviews were conducted in September 2006, with a response rate of 76%. Half the respondents were aware folate is currently added to some breakfast cereals (59%) and some breads (53%), but awareness of other food types that may be voluntarily fortified with folate was much lower. Only 13% of respondents were concerned about folate being added to bread, 10% believed folate should not be added to foods, and 9% said they would avoid foods with added folate. Generally, around half the respondents were uncertain about the benefits of fortifying foods with folate and around a quarter were uncertain about any risks or concerns with this practice., Conclusions: The community appears no more concerned about the fortification of bread with folate than they are about other existing fortification programs in Australia, and appear more likely to support rather than oppose the fortification of foods with folate, particularly if they are informed of the benefits of such a program.
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- 2007
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47. Community attitudes to the collection and use of identifiable data for health research--is it an invasion of privacy?
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Molster C, Bower C, and O'Leary P
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Western Australia, Attitude, Biomedical Research, Privacy
- Abstract
Objectives: To investigate community views on the statutory collection of identifiable data by the Western Australian Birth Defects Registry and the extent to which the use of such data is perceived to be an invasion of privacy, when balanced against the community benefit of three public health scenarios., Methods: Cross-sectional, computer-assisted telephone interviewing survey. Six hundred respondents were recruited randomly from the electronic version of the Western Australian telephone directory., Results: Interviews were conducted in August 2006 and the response rate was 78%. Most respondents indicated support for statutory notification of cases (79%) and did not consider the statutory notification of postcodes (85%) and names and addresses (65%) to be an invasion of privacy. Similarly, most (76%) did not consider the receipt of a letter requesting participation in research to be an invasion of privacy. Overall, 55% considered none of these to be an invasion of privacy and only 4% considered all to be an invasion of privacy., Conclusions: Most Western Australians do not consider the statutory inclusion and use of identifiable data by the WA Birth Defects Registry to be an invasion of privacy, to the extent that such data are required for legitimate public health research, would be notified by the registrant's medical practitioner and would be kept confidentially and securely.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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