Bettina Meiser

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AlmamaterUniversity of Sydney
KnownforGenetic counselling
FieldsCancer genetics, clinical and counselling psychology and psychiatry
InstitutionsUniversity of New South Wales
Bettina Meiser
Alma materUniversity of Sydney
Known forGenetic counselling
Scientific career
FieldsCancer genetics, clinical and counselling psychology and psychiatry
InstitutionsUniversity of New South Wales
Thesis Psychological characteristics and breast screening behaviours of women at increased risk of developing breast cancer and the impact of genetic counselling and testing[1]  (2000)

Bettina Meiser is an Australian geneticist. She is a professor at the University of New South Wales, with expertise in the psychosocial aspects of genetics; cancer, hereditary cancer, and the impact of genetic counselling and testing.[2][3]

Meiser has a BAppSc, BA (Hons) and PhD (Syd).[3] She is the Head of the Psychosocial Research Group, at the Prince of Wales Clinical School.  She holds a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Senior Research Fellowship Level B in addition to multiple research grants from the NHMRC, Australian Research Council, Cancer Australia, NSW Cancer Council, Cancer Institute NSW and the APEX Foundation for Research into Intellectual Disabilities.  Meiser has built a nationally and internationally recognised research program that assesses the psychosocial impact of genetic counselling and testing for hereditary disease; psychological adjustment of individuals at risk for hereditary disease; and the design and evaluation of interventions in the cancer genetic counselling setting, in particular decision aids as an innovative means of patient education. She leads a Psychosocial research group at the University of New South Wales.[4]

Her specific fields of research include cancer genetics, health, Clinical and Counselling Psychology and Psychiatry (incl. psychotherapy).[3]

Meiser was lead on a project, which developed a website with UNSW, Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA) and collaborators at other universities to address a gap in treatment of psychiatric treatment that is currently not available to people concerned about their own or family members’ vulnerability to depression.[5]

“There aren’t really any specialised genetic counsellors who cover psychiatric illnesses in Australia”, she said in an interview, in 2019. “The vast majority of genetic counsellors do prenatal genetic counselling or cancer genetic counselling. So we identified a gap and for that reason we set up this website to cater for what we believe is a sizeable group of people.”[5]

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