Family genogram,family tree, disease pattern in family, diseases in a family throughout generations,family illness, roles of the family, family dynamics, role of father, Three Generational Genogram ,role of mother, my grand parents.
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Family Genogram
1. MY 3 GENERATIONAL GENOGRAM
• What is a genogram ?
A visual description of families being multi-
generational constructs.
shows various trends in health conditions
how trends disappear over time.
(McGoldrick,2011).
3. PATERNAL GRANDPARENTS MATERNAL GRANDPARENTS
MY GENERATION FAMILY GENOGRAM
African American Christian(Me)
Aged 28
Maintains close links with family
Healthy
African Christian
Aged 56
Married at 22
Close relationship with family
African Christian
Aged 14
Maintains close links with family
Healthy
African Christian
Never married
Aged 35
Maintains close links with family
Has a heart problem
African Christian
Aged 19
Maintains close links with family
Healthy
African Christian
1st marriage at 25
2nd marriage at 30
Has hypertension she aged 77
African Christian
Married at the age of 32
Maintained a closer links with the
wife and children
Died of heart attack at 80 years
African Christian
37 years old
Healthy
Separated
Has closer relation with family
African Christian
58 years
Married at 25
Close relationship with family
Pre-diabetic
African Christian
Married at the age of 26
Shared a close bond with the wife never separated
Died at the age of 79 with pneumonia
African Christian
Married at the age of 23
DX diabetes type at 55
Developed diabetic blindness at 67 years
Died at 72 years of DKA
Fraternal uncle Father Mother Maternal uncle
4. Disease Pattern
1st Generation
Paternal/Maternal
2nd Generation
Paternal/Maternal
3rd Generation
Paternal/Maternal
•Grandmother: diabetes at age of 45 died at 75
•Grandfather- died at the age of 79 pneumonia
•Grandmother –HTN at 77
•Grandfather- Heart Attack at 80 years
Father: prediabetes
Paternal uncle: healthy
Mother: Healthy
•Maternal Uncle- Heart problem
•No known medical problem
5. Family Roles
•Female
children- assist
mother in
house work
• Male children
-
•Wife- mostly
house wife
•Father- sole
breadwinner
Work trade
Education/vocation
Education/TRADE
work
6. Conclusion
through the adoption of different lifestyles in the family
and choosing spouses, the incidences of the conditions have
significantly reduced over the years
However, many of the other conditions show later in life.
not conclusive to say that the conditions no longer exist in the
family.
Despite this, the family has achieved a lot in fighting genetic
disorders.
7. References
• Bhaskar, S., & Chandak, G. R. (2015). New insights from monogenic diabetes for “common” type 2
diabetes. Frontiers in Genetics, 6. https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2015.00251
• Declerck, K., & Vanden, W. (2015). From inflammaging to healthy aging by dietary lifestyle choices: is
epigenetics the key to personalized nutrition? Clinical Epigenetics, 7(1).
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13148-015-0068-2
• McGoldrick, M. (2011). The genogram journey: Reconnecting with your family. New York, NY: WW
Norton.
• Peloso, G. M., & Wilson, J. G. (2015). Multiple rare alleles at LDLR and APOA5 confer risk for early-
onset myocardial infarction. Nature, 518(7537), 102–106. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature13917
• Petersen, J. A., & Boyd, H. A. (2015). A Detailed Family History of Myocardial Infarction and Risk of
Myocardial Infarction – A Nationwide Cohort Study. PLoS ONE, 10(5).
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125896
• Skyler, J. S., & Darsow, T. (2017). Differentiation of Diabetes by Pathophysiology, Natural History, and
Prognosis. Diabetes, 66(2), 241–255. https://doi.org/10.2337/db16-0806
• Stein, S. A., & Pollin, T. I. (2014). Genetic Counseling for Diabetes Mellitus. Current Genetic Medicine
Reports, 2(2), 56–67. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40142-014-0039-5