Home / Services / Specialty Clinics / Neurogenetics Clinic

Pie chart of Neurogenetic Clients by Disciplines - Social Work 13%, Medical Genetics 46%, Genetic Counseling 31%, Nursing 7% and Neurology 3%.The UCEDD’s Neurogenetics Clinic is co-sponsored by the Departments of Neurology and Medicine (Medical Genetics). The clinic’s purpose is to evaluate, diagnose and provide genetic counseling and long-term management for patients and families with a wide variety of genetic diseases of the nervous system. This clinic is also a clinical training site for medical students, residents, and fellows.

The Neurogenetics Clinic is a full-day clinic that meets three times each month. Each year the clinic serves over 300 clients who have an array of neurogenetic disorders including Huntington’s disease, Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy, hereditary neuropathy, hereditary ataxias, muscular dystrophies, familial dementia, familial movement disorders, leukodystrophies, Neimann Pick type C, and others. This clinic uses an interdisciplinary team approach that includes a neurologist, a neurogenetic nurse specialist, a genetic counselor and a medical social service worker. The patients receive examination, diagnostic testing, genetic counseling, attention to their social service needs and longitudinal follow-up. This represents a unique clinical resource in the state of Washington and includes an outreach clinic on an annual basis in Spokane and Yakima.

Clinic Contact

  • Debbie Olson
    Debbie Olson Phone: 206.598.4030
Neurogenetics Clinic 2020
Number of Unique Clients 592
Number of Visits 1,595
Visit per Client Ratio 3
Number of Clinician-Client Interactions 1904
Clinician/Client Interaction per Client Ratio 3

Neurogenetics Clinic by Categorical Diagnoses

Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder
1%
Autism Spectrum Disorder
4%
Cerebral Palsy
1%
Chronic Illness
66%
Hearing Impairment
1%
Intellectual Disabilities
3%
Other Health Conditions
14%
Socio-Emotional/Behavioral Disorders
6%
Visual Impairment
4%

Would you like to visit/train/research/learn more about us?

(Opens in new tab)