In this explainer episode, we’ve asked Amanda Pichini, Clinical Director at Genomics England and Genetic Counsellor, to explain which healthcare professionals you may come into contact with in your genomic healthcare journey.

You can also find a series of short videos explaining some of the common terms you might encounter about genomics on our YouTube channel.

If you’ve got any questions, or have any other topics you’d like us to explain, feel free to contact us on info@genomicsengland.co.uk.

You can read the transcript below or download it here: https://www.genomicsengland.co.uk/assets/documents/Podcast-transcripts/Which-healthcare-professionals-are-involved-in-my-genomics-healthcare-journey.docx 

Florence: Which healthcare professionals are involved in my genomic healthcare journey? I'm joined with Amanda Pichini, Clinical Director for Genomics England, and genetic counsellor to find out more. So firstly, when someone has a genetic or genomic test, what kind of healthcare professionals might they come into contact with? 

Amanda: Well, everyone has a different journey, and it can depend on the type of test you have and the reason for having it. Some tests might only look for a single gene. Some might look at many genes, and some look for a very specific gene change that's already known to be in someone's family. Some genomic tests are there to find the cause of a person's diagnosis, understand more about their cancer, or maybe to predict a future health problem that they may have or that's in their family. 

So usually people start with their GP, who they go to with a question about their health or their child's health, and this could lead to them being referred to a clinical genetic service or perhaps another specialist team.  

Florence: So, then what is the purpose of a clinical genetics team? 

Amanda: Well, a clinical genetics team, in brief, aims to provide people that have a genetic condition or are at risk of one with health information, including information about prevention, counselling support, and genomic testing, and they focus on the whole family. 

Adults and children can both be seen in a genetic service. Clinical genetics teams tend to focus on rare conditions and rare predispositions to certain types of cancers, so really anything that might have a strong genetic basis and could impact someone at any stage of their life. A clinical genetics team is made up of a range of roles, and that could include clinical genetics, doctors, genetic counsellors, clinical scientists, and administrative staff. 

Florence: Could you tell me a little bit more about each of those roles?  

Amanda: Sure. I am a genetic counsellor, so I'll start with that. Genetic counsellors are specially trained healthcare professionals that help patients and families understand information about their genomic health, as well as provide guidance and emotional support. 

So, this could be about understanding their family history, making informed choices about having a genetic or genomic test, or helping them to come to terms with a result or a new diagnosis and the impact that could have on them or their family. Clinical geneticists are medically trained doctors that specialise in genetic conditions. 

They understand the underlying ways that genetics can affect health, and they use that to help make diagnoses for patients. How about genomic scientists? These are often not seen directly by patients, but they're vital to someone's genomic healthcare journey. So clinical genomic scientists and genetic technologists work in labs, and they're involved in processing patient samples, working with those other healthcare professionals to select the most appropriate genomic tests to perform and interpreting those results based on the variance or genetic changes that are seen in patients, which are usually summarised in a lab report. 

There's lots of other healthcare professionals that can also, um, be in a clinical genetics team. That could include

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