Nearly Every American Believes That Knowledge
Of Family History Is Important,
Yet Only One-Third Attempt To Gather It
Health & Human Services Launches New Family
Health History Initiative
Monday, Nov. 8, 2004
HHS Secretary Tommy G. Thompson today launched a Family
History Initiative to encourage all Americans to learn
about their families' health histories as a way of promoting
personal health and preventing disease.
"With this new family health history tool we are
entering the next generation of prevention," Secretary
Thompson said. "In addition to healthy eating and
exercising, we know that technology and research can
also prevent and treat disease before the disease becomes
debilitating. The miracle of the human genome provides
new hope for millions of Americans and a new path to
health for all of us."
U.S. Surgeon General Richard H. Carmona declared Thanksgiving
Day, when American families traditionally gather to
celebrate and give thanks, to be the first annual National
Family History Day. Americans are encouraged to use
their family gatherings as a time to collect important
family health history information that can benefit all
family members.
To help gather family history information, HHS released
a new, free computer program that organizes important
health information into a printout that can be taken
to a health care professional to help determine whether
a patient is at higher risk for disease. The printout
can also be placed in a patient's medical record. The
new computerized tool, called "My Family Health
Portrait," can be downloaded at www.hhs.gov/familyhistory/.
"The bottom line is that knowing your family
history can save your life," Dr. Carmona said.
"Millions of dollars in medical research, equipment,
and knowledge can't give us the information that this
simple tool can. And when a health care professional
is equipped with a patient's family health history,
he or she can easily assess the inherent risk factors
and begin tests or treatment even before any disease
is evident."
Most Americans believe that knowing their family health
history can be beneficial, but relatively few have ever
attempted to collect it in an organized way. According
to results from the Healthstyles 2004 Survey, conducted
in August by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) and to be published later this month,
96 percent of Americans believe that knowing family
history is important to their health. The survey also
shows, however, that only one-third of Americans has
ever tried to gather and organize their families' health
histories.
"We are proud to collaborate on this project because
clearly the public is eager for a tool to help them
collect and organize their family health history,"
said Muin Khoury, M.D., Ph.D., director of CDC's Office
of Genomics and Disease Prevention. "It is our
hope as families gather this holiday season, they'll
take the time to learn -- and record -- their families'
health histories so that they can continue to have years
of family gatherings together." Family history
is not new. Every young physician learns that it is
a valuable clinical tool to help know what diseases
to watch for in patients.
"Family history can be a window into a person's
genome," said Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D.,
director of the National Human Genome Research Institute,
one of the 27 institutes and centers at the National
Institutes of Health, and a leader of the now-completed
Human Genome Project. "In the future, tests resulting
from the Human Genome Project will make it possible
to identify the glitches we all carry in our genes,
glitches that increase our susceptibility to common
illnesses. Until then, tracking illnesses from one generation
of a family to the next can help doctors infer the illnesses
for which we are at risk, and thus enable them to create
personalized disease-prevention plans."
Gathering enough family history information to make
useful predictions, however, has become increasingly
difficult as health care has become more complex, and
numerous pressures decrease the amount of time that
doctors and nurses spend with their patients. Even when
a health care professional attempts to collect a family
health history, patients frequently do not know the
details of what diseases run in their families. The
Surgeon General's Family Health Initiative addresses
these problems by helping people to gather and record
the information before going to their medical appointments.
The "My Family Health Portrait" tool guides
users through a series of screens that helps them compile,
for each family member, information about six common
diseases, including heart disease, cancer and diabetes.
In addition, individuals are able to add conditions
not on the list. After information is collected about
grandparents, parents, siblings, children, aunts, uncles,
and cousins, the tool creates a graphic print-out that
organizes the information into a diagram that can be
used by a health care professional to better individualize
diagnosis, treatment, and prevention plans.
The tool allows users to go back and add information
as it becomes available and is able to create a diagram
for an individual without complete information about
every family member.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
operates a national database of medical practice guidelines,
developed by independent medical and professional organizations,
that can help individuals and their health care professionals
to customize prevention programs. Family health history
is one of the criteria for many of the practice guidelines,
which frequently recommend specific medical testing
to detect an illness early. The guidelines can be found
at the National Guideline Clearinghouse, www.guideline.gov.
AHRQ is part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services.
The "My Family Health Portrait" software
can be downloaded from the Internet and installed on
computers using the Windows operating system with the
.NET framework installed.
All personal information entered into the program is
maintained on the user's computer only; no information
is available to the federal government or any other
agency. The software will be available in both English
and Spanish.
In addition to the software tool, a print version of
"My Family Health Portrait" will be available
in English and Spanish through the Federal Citizen Information
Center and at consolidated health centers nationwide.
Consolidated health centers provide care to patients
regardless of their ability to pay. HHS' Health Resources
and Services Administration funds the national network
of more than 3,600 community health centers, migrant
health centers, health care for the homeless centers,
and public housing primary care centers.
To get a print version of the tool, individuals can
contact the Federal Citizen Information Center at 1-888-8-PUEBLO
(1-888-878-3256), write to: "My Family Health Portrait,"
Pueblo, CO 81009, or print out the tool at http://www.hhs.gov/familyhistory/