J Genet Couns. 2026 Jun;35(3):e70220. doi: 10.1002/jgc4.70220.
ABSTRACT
Genetic counseling assistants (GCAs) support genetic counselors (GCs) and genetics clinic workflows, but their potential roles in pretest genetic counseling for rare diseases have not been explored. A pilot within the Mayo Clinic Center for Individualized Medicine’s Genetic Testing and Counseling Clinic (GTAC), which offers predefined tests for patients with rare disease, explored the impact of GCA pretest education on appointment time and patient questions. After training, GCAs met GTAC patients prior to the GC to provide scripted information on genetics concepts, the visit purpose, and the test including result types and disclosure plans. Data from the pilot and a control group were collected and analyzed using descriptive statistics and two-sided t-tests. Patient cohort characteristics did not differ between the two models. When a GCA provided pretest education, the GC spent an average of 11.2 minutes less with the patient during their session compared to visits completed solely by the GC (p < 0.0001). Total appointment time was not impacted by GCA education. Questions asked to GCAs were often not within GCA scope to answer (72.7%), and some patients asked repetitive questions to both the GC and GCA (63.2%). Reduction in GC time per patient could lead to increased accessibility by allowing additional patients to be seen in a day. Similar models may support GCA professional development while allowing GCs to remove repetitive education from their genetic counseling sessions, leading to less burnout and/or increased job satisfaction. Impact on administrative workflows, access, revenue, patient satisfaction and outcomes and GC/GCA satisfaction and benefits can continue to be explored when trialing models incorporating GCAs in pretest education roles.
PMID:42137995 | DOI:10.1002/jgc4.70220