Impacts of student debt on the professional and personal lives of genetic counselors: A 10‐year perspective
Holly L. Greer, Elizabeth M. Petty, Michael R. Lasarev, Ashley Kuhl

TL;DR
A 10-year study finds that student debt continues to burden genetic counselors, affecting their personal and professional lives without changing career choices.
Contribution
The study updates and expands on prior research by analyzing the long-term impacts of student debt on genetic counselors.
Findings
96% of respondents still feel burdened by their student debt.
45% reported experiencing more hardship than anticipated.
Student debt influences lifestyle choices but not career paths.
Abstract
The financial landscape for those entering the genetic counseling profession has shifted significantly regarding salaries and educational costs since the 2014 study by Kuhl et al. Limited information is available regarding whether and how educational costs and student debt impacts have changed over time for genetic counselors. An updated web‐based survey of 317 recent genetic counseling program graduates was conducted to address this gap. Overall, educational costs, total debt, and salaries showed increases from the prior study, and many factors measuring the impact of genetic counseling graduate student debt showed little to no change. Ninety‐six percent (n = 222/232) of respondents still reported feeling burdened by their student debt, and 45% (n = 105/232) reported experiencing more hardship than anticipated, though most respondents were once again satisfied with their genetic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMentoring and Academic Development · Adolescent and Pediatric Healthcare
