World's Largest Medical Experiment 135
eldavojohn writes "Recently in the UK, a Biobank project has been rolled out to 'unpick' the genetic basis of diseases such as cancer on half a million volunteers. This is based on the success of a three-month pilot phase conducted on 3,800 participants. From the article: 'Over the next four years, blood and urine samples will be collected from volunteers aged 40 to 69, to help scientists unravel the genetic foundations of common diseases, including cancer, heart disease, diabetes, dementia and joint problems. If you live in the UK, agreeing to this survey may involve a little more than you would expect."
What they really need to get this rolling...... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What they really need to get this rolling...... (Score:5, Funny)
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DeCODE (Score:5, Informative)
Sounds like a good idea... (Score:5, Insightful)
they properly inform people about the program and its uses before having them volunteer.
they are rigorous in protecting privacy. (No AOL fiasco.)
they closely monitor different companies are doing with the data - no cross-referencing with their own data to identify people, no reselling of the data, etc.
they allow patients to "opt-out" even after they have volunteered.
they provide it for free to interested, responsible paries. (Or at least cheap enough that major pharmaceutical companies aren't the only customers.)
they follow the ethical standards of the profession, and not the ethical standards of the mighty dollar (or pound).
Only a problem (Score:2, Informative)
Only for a problem that, when confronted by someone demanding blood / semen
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WANTED: FINGERS (Score:1)
Just place a classified advert in Craiglist or the Cleveland Picayune or some other paper, saying "WANTED: FINGERS. WE REMOVE. YOU PAY $16"....and don't be surprised if you get a few customers.
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What? (Score:5, Insightful)
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What? He is Beaver's brother, Penis Cleaver.
You didn't know they were twins playing one role, like the Olsen twins?
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How many of us here played "Wing Commander IV: The Price of Freedom?" Okay, lots of us.
I can tell you right now that it is not outside the realm of possibility to engineer viruses that kill people who don't meet a certain genetic template. More to the point, if you have a gene for X, it kills you or sterilizes you. "Gene X" could be anything from skin color to blood type to a gene predisposing you to breast cancer or familial hyperlipidemia.
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This is certainly a frightening prospect. But the most frightening is a killer virus targeting skin color or other racial phenotype. The problem with do
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Oh dear.
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If I'm not mistaken, the original comment looked to me like a rather obvious reference to the the eroding freedoms and big-brothering going on in the UK as of late
Re:What? (Score:5, Funny)
NO! Then you would expect it!!!
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[insert Python Spanish Inquisition joke here]
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http://www.ukbiobank.ac.uk/about/participantinfor
The only clause that raised a flag in my mind was the long-term access to medical records, even in the event you die or become mentally incompetent. Other than that, the terms seem downright sane for such a potentially Orwellian study.
The actual relevant website URL (Score:3, Informative)
Of course, the volunteers won't make a penny (Score:1, Insightful)
In the best sense, surely any profitable outcome that arises out of data provided by these volunteers should be subject to some sort of profit sharing? Afterall, without the volunteers, it may not be possible for these pharmaceutical
Follow through. (Score:5, Insightful)
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What I'd rather see happen is the NHS get subsidised drugs that are developed as a result of this study.
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They also get the benefit of cures down the road, and the satisfaction of helping others even if a cure for their particular disease doesn't come out of the study.
There's also a strong aversion in the medical community to coercive measures being used to get people involved in medical studies. Pay
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I don't begrudge anyone from making moneym, in particular when there will be a benefit to society.
BFD -- how is this different from anything else in the US or the UK. Ever heard of "pollution credits"? The practice is already institutionalized.
I suppose you support "pollution credits"? If not why use it to argue against something that you otherwise agree with?
Why is it OK for th
Re:Of course, the volunteers won't make a penny (Score:4, Interesting)
Depending on who the research group really is - if they are a pharm corporation they are in no way funded to find a "cure" for anything - but if they are truly independent they may be looking to cure something....
I work with a ton of medical researchers at the university where I work, and many of the research volunteers are doing it just for the sake of science. Yes, it is surprising, but there still are some folks out there motivated by other things than greed. As the earlier poster pointed out, they are compensated for travel time, given free medical treatment and/or drugs, etc. Some even get compensated for their time...
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That's why they're called volunteers!! "without pay" is part of the definition. Therefore, if they did see a penny, they wouldn't be volunteers!
The largest experiment that we know about... (Score:5, Funny)
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Don't worry, it's only transmitted through cell phones.
KFG
Re:The largest experiment that we know about... (Score:4, Interesting)
BTW, My city was used as the control for the origional flouride treatments in the early 1900's Only retarted morons are afraid of the Flouride in water. It's health benefits are only rivaled by clorinating water in making people live longer.
Flouride ions in water consumed by children make a drastic and dramatic change in the reduction of caries and decay in teeth, increasing the health of the general population significantly. Adults get no benefit from the ion and only huge doses like you find in toothpaste actually affect adult teeth.
BTW, way before you get poisoned by Flouride your theeth will mottle. I.E. turn brown from the excess flouride... ask many well water drinters from the southwest about flouride in the water, they have too much in many places from natural ground water.
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Side effects also include an unusual mental disorder, whose primary symptom involves an insatiable desire to mount large falling bombs while wearing a cowboy hat, whooping and hollering all the way to ground zero.
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Although it could have something to do with the paper mill there too. Who knows.
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No Floride and no cavities (Score:2)
I've always thought a resistance to floridation was unfounded, but my two brothers and I grew up in a town without it and none of us has ever had a single cavity. A few of my friends I grew up with also didn't have any. Certainly we weren't a cavity free town, but how does this compare to places with Floridation? Do no kids there get cavities?
Our hometown ac
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Don't believe me? Then you're clearly wearing the wrong type of protection.
I thought the largest medical experiment... (Score:1)
Nah (Score:2)
My guess is the experiment is to eventually get us to the point that embalming is no longer necessary. Morticians and coroners have already noticed that people now take longer to decay when they die and the speculation is that all of the preservatives and antibiotics in our food is the cause.
Cheers,
Dave
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The issue of volunteer compensation is interesting. Before the era o
Air America (Score:1)
How does this stack up to the $875,000 in taxpayer grants Air America received in funds diverted from the Gloria Wise Boys & Girls Club charit
Why bother with volunteers? (Score:2, Funny)
Just go down to any chav-infested town centre on a Friday or Saturday night. Plenty of blood and urine around then...
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Dog / bark / tree / wrong (Score:1, Troll)
The longer we spend trying to find what is wrong with US, as opposed to what is wrong with the crap we eat, drink and breathe is the biggest killer of all. Somehow though, doctors are oblivious to the fact that the only animals that get cancer, heart disease, diabetes etc are us, and our domesticated pets (and livestock, etc). And so they don't find it unusual that the most sucessful primate in the world has more built-in flaws than a pre-alpha build of Windows. Hang on a second!!! Doesn't evolution sel
Re: None more wrong than you (Score:1, Insightful)
Umm, No that is completely and totally incorrect. However "We and our Pets" are the only ones DIAGNOSED and TREATED for any of these conditions. The wild animals that suffer from these problems all DIE and are EATEN by predators or scavengers.
Why is it that some people will believe the MOST RIDICULOUS things without doing a single bit of
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I don't know, I think this is a good thing. If people want to kill themselves let them. There are already tons of people working on diet and anti-cholesterol drugs and such to "help" those people.
But what if you eat well and such? Something like this could be very important. You may think you are eating healthy, but what if you could take a test and find out that your diet needed more of X because that would reduce your risk of Y which is high because of genes A, B, and C?
Also, don't forget that it's easi
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Non-UK residents... (Score:2, Funny)
extensible web data (Score:1)
An interesting project... (Score:2, Interesting)
Just a pity that they don't follow the subjects for a longer period of time. Although one can certainly learn a lot by tracking people for 4 years, I wonder if it is long enough for certain diseases which are, sadly enough, far too common.
As a comparison:
Largest CONTROLLED medical experiment (Score:3, Interesting)
Will the thinning of the ozone layer result in more cancer?
Will increased pollution cause health problems?
Will increasing the average air temperature over time have health consequences?
Will advertising cigarettes on television lead to more lung cancer?
Will not promoting condoms lead to an increase in HIV transmission?
and many more.
Yes, I know, technically those aren't "medical experiments" but we still have an opportunity to learn from them.
Bigger (Score:2)
I got news for ya (Score:2)
And you and I are the guinea pigs.
Dammit Jim, it's a study not an experiment... (Score:2)
I believe what we have here is a medical study on the longitudinal form...they have been run before (I recall one at Harvard which tracked 40,000 men for several decades, if memory serves me right) with quite large populations.
Let's get our terminology right...
Yours,
Jordan
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Lemme make sure the department of redundancy department knows this...
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The military did invent it. (Score:2, Funny)
Both are true [flakmag.com]: the military invented it and it came from monkeys. One on the same.
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I think some of the monkeys might tend to get upset at the suggestion that they evolved from the military.
KFG
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curse you (Score:1)
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Don't make me go all Librarian [wikipedia.org] on your ass!
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Cancer is what happens when... (Score:4, Insightful)
Blame Logan 5 (Score:1)
Things just really haven't been right since Logan 5 came along and destroyed Carrousel and the renewal process. They should have known better than to design a computer that destroys a city if you give it a confusing sentence.
Re:Cancer is what happens when... (Score:4, Interesting)
Our environment contains more substances today which cause cells to mutate: estrogen-like chemicals, fine soot particles, innumerous medicines, radioactive decay, socially acceptable behaviors like smoking. Additionally is the continued decay of the athmosphere's blocking of UV radiation (and basement-dweller sensitivity to the sun) and the "ozone layer" problems. Overuse of antibiotics has created "superbugs" we can't completely cure (tubercolosis, staph infections).
If our bodies were not meant to last this long, babies born of old males and young females should have more genetic problems than young males and females. If our sole purpose was to reproduce a few times and die "young" (before 35), then why do our cells have so many proteins dedicated to detecting and repairing chromosome damage? Shouldn't they deactivate after 35 years?
Why would nature keep old people around? How does nature select for old age genes if you reproduce when young? Some theories are that older people pass their life's knowledge to the next generation, without the next generation having to experience it themselves. Older people act as secondary caregivers, freeing the younger generation to do "useful stuff".
There's no reason to believe our bodies were made to wear out at 60 or 70. Eat less calories, more fruit and veggies high in anti-oxidant compounds, exercise (physical labor and mental), and there's no reason that our bodies couldn't last... longer. How much longer? One study [nih.gov] says maybe 120 years.
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Ummm...we've been surrounded by soot since the invention of fire. And as for smoking being socially acceptable, what country do you live in? Here in the US of A, we're about two steps from smokers being branded with an 'S' on their foreheads. I'm stockpiling a 60-year supply of pipe tobacco just in c
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It is not so much that they should deactivate after 35 years but more that they are left running.
Why would nature keep old people around? How does nature select for old age genes if you reproduce when young?
Nature would only select for long life genes if they gave preferential advantage to th
Fine (Score:5, Funny)
Fine. You first.
Re:But.. (Score:4, Informative)
Don't believe me? Look at the CIA factbook for Japan, US, and China:
Japan's [cia.gov] birthrate is lower than it's deathrate. It's fertility rate is only 1.4.
China's [cia.gov] birthrate is higher than it's deathrate for now, but it has a below 2.1 fertility rate. That means they too will have a smaller population in the future.
The US [cia.gov] also has a below 2.1 fertility rate (at 2.09), so it too will be seeing population decline were it not for immigrants.
See Overpopulation.com [overpopulation.com] for more about the fertility rate and population growth.
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Hmm... Looking at the overpopulaiton website, it looks like the population of the world will stabilize somewhere between 2050 and 2100. Probably at what, 7-8 billion?
New Army slogan? (Score:1)
I guess it beats that "Army of One" slogan.
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Wave after wave of geriatric soldiers charging, stumbling, and wheeling to their doom.
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Hahaha (Score:2)
Fucking dumbass.
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Informative)
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How is this moderated Troll when someone (below) asks essentially the same question [slashdot.org] and it gets modified +5 Insightful?
I was puzzled as well by the summary's assertion. Glad I didn't ask...
Re:Largest experiment ... (Score:4, Informative)
Apparantly, the parent poster doesn't realize that we've been doing this since time immemorial, through a process called "selective breeding". Different DNA in the corn doesn't make a difference once its in your system, all of it will still be broken down for individual sugars and proteins, etc. The DNA won't suddenly become hostile and start mutating you. Its still just corn. Genetically modified? Certainly. Just like any corn you could buy from anywhere, but this modification was done in a lab instead of through several generations of selective breeding. Also, its great with butter and salt!
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Nice straw man. I would say there is a significant difference between the selective breeding of cattle to improve milk production and the injection of bovine growth hormone (BGH) to achieve that end. For example, there is indication that BGH causes health problems in cows and results in more pus in milk. Personally, if I'm drinking milk, I'd rather it came from healthy animals and that the milk has a lower pus count.
Or let's take a more obvious human example: steriods. Steriods are natural. They are impor
Paranoia and junk science together at last (Score:1)
Re:Largest experiment ... (Score:4, Interesting)
There's a great deal of unwarranted fear-mongering going on behind the anti-GM food movement. They're scared of change, and of the pace that change comes at. They yell and scream loudly about it, and stick to their "organic" foods (which is a rather misleading title in itself, as the title of "organic" technically means that it need only contain carbon to be accurate - there's no regulation on this label in most places). Meanwhile, they offer no evidence that anything is wrong, just a lot of FUD. If you wish to say that something is dangerous, that's fine. Give me proof that its dangerous, and I might start listening to you. No "maybe"s or "what if"s. Solid facts, statistically relevant samples, and long term studies. GM foods have been around for roughly 12 years, and in that time over 100 studies have been done and no health risks have been found. I'll source this if you want, although I'm certain you have access to Google too. Until you can show me a reason to be concerned, stop crying wolf. Meanwhile the benefits such as increased yields, decreased maintenance and pesticide reliance, decreased irrigation requirements, and many others are here, real, tested and shown.
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