NIH Studies Universal Genome Sequencing At Birth 128
sciencehabit writes "In a few years, all new parents may go home from the hospital with not just a bundle of joy, but with something else—the complete sequence of their baby's DNA. A new research program funded at $25 million over 5 years by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) will explore the promise—and ethical challenges—of sequencing every newborn's genome."
Why wait for birth? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Yes, it seems silly to wait till birth. That is too late to deal with many genetic problems. With earlier testing, the parents will also have the option of aborting if the genetic problems are severe. In days gone by, prenatal testing, such as amniocentesis, was invasive and could cause problems. But there are now several non-invasive prenatal tests which employ DNA sequencing of fragments of fetal DNA in the mother's blood.
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parents will also have the option of aborting if the genetic problems are severe
Or minor. Or because it's a girl.
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parents will also have the option of aborting if the genetic problems are severe
Or minor. Or because it's a girl.
And aborting because the child is a girl requires a genetic test now? Get your slippery slope bullshit out of here.
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People who abort because they dont want to deal with a child who has special needs are not uncommon. Girls are aborted because their less valued. Now lets ensure that every parent k
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It's not a slippery slope. It's a reality. The world has moved significantly down the road of choosing which lives are worthwhile, and which are just too big of a hassle.
What? As opposed to what earlier time? 1100AD? Earlier? Later? 1500AD? 1700 AD? Oh I see, you are only talking about post-slavery days.. so 1900 and beyond.. back during the bright, human rights upholding days of the industrial revolution with, you know child labor and no sufferage.. oh you mean later than that? About when Civil Rights became a *thing*. ?
No later than THAT? Jesus buddy, we're running out of room on this end of history.
Fuck.
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Allow me to clarify for the deliberately obtuse: The world has moved significantly down the road of choosing which unborn lives are worthwhile, and which are just too big of a hassle.
So? To me this sounds like a GOOD THING. Too many children are born for the wrong reasons (family pressure, no contraceptives available, condom broke, drunk teenagers fooling around). More deliberate planning could only help.
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Because we only have half of the world using these tests now to abort girls.
It is no where near "half the world". Even in China, the gender imbalance may be overstated. Many girl births are not reported. Some provinces offer incentives to encourage more girls, such as relaxing the "one child policy" if additional children are girls, so it effectively becomes a "one boy policy".
The root of the gender imbalances are cultural problems. Most Chinese lack pensions, and need a son to care for them when they are old (a daughter traditionally cares for her husband's parents). Some reg
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I was under the impression that there was a fairly simple amniotic fluid test which reveals gender. I could be wrong, but it seems to me that even if you have to resort to a genetic sample it still doesn't require DNA analysis, just a much simpler check for the existence of a Y chromosome - something that was discovered long before we even had the capacity to read the DNA itself.
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I was under the impression that there was a fairly simple amniotic fluid test which reveals gender. I could be wrong, but it seems to me that even if you have to resort to a genetic sample it still doesn't require DNA analysis, just a much simpler check for the existence of a Y chromosome - something that was discovered long before we even had the capacity to read the DNA itself.
However, for most cases, ultrasound is much preferred to drawing amniotic fluid (amniocentesis) due to the risk of introducing infection.
Re: Why wait for birth? (Score:2)
Or minor. Or because it's a girl.
It's their body, they should be able to do whatever they want with it. We should stay out of the affairs of others.
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My first impulse is to agree, though I do suspect personal eugenics will end up leading quite rapidly (within a few generations) toward a perfectly reasonable discrimination against the poor as the wealthy pre-screen their children for defects, intelligence, beauty, etc, etc ,etc. In essence creating a race of supermen. Probably less ugly up front than government eugenics, but the long-term social fallout could be quite nasty.
On the other hand it also seems like one of the least-ugly routes towards taking
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... discrimination against the poor as the wealthy pre-screen their children for defects, intelligence, beauty, etc, etc ,etc.
An abortion costs a couple hundred bucks, and is far cheaper than a live delivery. Genetic sequencing is falling in cost at an exponential rate. There is no good reason to believe that genetic screening will only be available to "the rich". Plus society as a whole benefits when fewer sick or retarded people are born, so there will be pressure to make these services widely available.
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there will be pressure to make these services widely available.
And now we're back to government sponsored eugenics.
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there will be pressure to make these services widely available.
And now we're back to government sponsored eugenics.
Available != Mandatory
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QED why this is a BAD IDEA (Score:3)
If this can be used to decide to ABORT a child then this is a bad idea.
gene markers that could be used to decide that a child needs to be aborted
1 wrong gender
2 not smart enough
3 not athletic enough
4 wrong eye/hair color
5 not "pretty enough"
6 Gay/Not Gay
7 wrong skin color (bonus reason for Mixed Parents)
8 Voice not Right
8 wrong body build
i could go on but the real Evil would be when gene editing is possible.
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And for the other retarded reasons, besides the fact that you can't extrapolate a person from their genes. You can find likelihoods, but outside of a few exceptions your common physical and mental traits are at best very weakly tied to genes. Unless there's a glaring genetic disease, it's what happens in development that's driving common phenotypical differences. Sure, there're a few genes you can
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Don't mistake "we don't know how to read" with "it hasn't been written". To use your example of intelligence: aside from a few contributory genes it's true, we don't understand how intelligence is genetically encoded. But the fact that you can look at the parents and make a good guess shows that there *is* a strong genetic component, children are not a blank slate, and eventually we'll (presumably) learn to read DNA well enough to understand it.
At present we're not even at the Dick and Jane reader
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9. Excess chromosome, child will require extensive care for most of their life and is unlikely to reach independence.
10. Child will be healthy until around the age of fourty, then rapidly lose mental faculties and be reduced to continually asking why their dead wife doesn't come to visit the care home.
11. Child has no immune system, and will require constant hospital care for the few years they survive.
12. Cystic fibrosis. Survival to adulthood is possible, but not without constant and very expensive medica
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1 wrong gender
Gender can be determined with ultra-sound. No DNA testing is required. Gender imbalances are bad for society, but gender selection is not inherently bad if it balances out. Some Asian cultures prefer sons, but Caucasian mothers undergoing IVF are more likely to prefer daughters.
2 not smart enough
3 not athletic enough
4 wrong eye/hair color
5 not "pretty enough"
6 Gay/Not Gay
7 wrong skin color (bonus reason for Mixed Parents)
8 Voice not Right
8 wrong body build
Unless it is your kid, I would say that none of these considerations are any of your damn business.
i could go on but the real Evil would be when gene editing is possible.
Just because you saw something portrayed as "evil" in a movie, does not make it evil in real life. Gene editing should lead to a h
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> Gene editing should lead to a healthier and smarter population. Why is that "evil"?
I would say it's not, inherently. However the reality is that such technology is likely to be far more accessible to the rich than the rest of us - initially they'll be the only ones who can afford it, and going forward they will still be the ones who can afford the more extensive/valuable cutting-edge gene mods. The almost inevitable result will be a race of supermen who are objectively better than the rest by almost
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The almost inevitable result will be a race of supermen who are objectively better than the rest by almost any metric you care to use.
This would be a great plot for a Hollywood movie, but otherwise has little connection to reality. There is no good reason to believe that genetic mods will be particularly expensive. We already produce trillions of genetically modified soybeans. The soybean genome is no less complex than the human genome. Since the cost of the mods will be far less than the cost of raising a defective child, they should be covered by most insurance plans. Everyone who wants an enhanced child will get one.
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Well, we produce trillions of descendants from a few dozen soybeans that had their genes modified. We're not exactly tweaking every bean.
The complexity of the genome isn't much of an issue when you're just inserting a gene, swapping out a gene is likely to be much harder.
Plus, when you screw up a few soybeans, there's no moral pressure
sequence blastocyst before implanation (Score:2)
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You wait until birth because in-utero DNA sampling carries a risk of miscarriage or birth defects.
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given the NHS's catastrophic record for IT projects
Confusing NIH and NHS, which, besides being in different countries, have totally different missions?
Re:Are they collecting everything? (Score:5, Funny)
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We know that they WILL fuck it up. It's a fuckup at the idea stage, already. So there will be a universal database of sequenced genomes from this generation, on, What about that isn't a fuckup? It takes a village of fuckups to raise a fuckup, so we can infer Hillarys part in this. It will be supported by liberals to "save the children", so we can see it supporting Repubmocrat elections. NIH will start handing out "immunizations" based on genetic needs and fuck that up as well. Wouldn't it be safer to just g
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So there will be a universal database of sequenced genomes from this generation, on
Why would universal sequencing imply a database? You can get it on a media the same way you get a birth certificate. If you lose it, your problem (at least the genome can be re-sequenced, unlike other kinds of medical records).
It will be supported by liberals to "save the children"
How obviously reasonable medical regulations and procedures correspond with "liberalism" or "non-liberalism" is beyond me. I have yet to see "liberal" and "non-liberal" doctors - so far, I haven't seen any such dichotomy in my country. Doctors around here seem to be very uniform in ho
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How obviously reasonable medical regulations
I think we disagree on what constitutes obviously reasonable. I have a strong aversion to ANY government mandated medical procedure; vaccinations have a teensy bit of justification because that directly affects the welfare of those around you, but theres no such grounds for justifying mandatory genome sequencing.
"liberalism" or "non-liberalism"
Liberalism tends to support the idea that we must work together to solve the world's problems, usually manifesting as requiring cooperation through laws in order to approach an ideal. Non-liberals
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vaccinations have a teensy bit of justification because that directly affects the welfare of those around you
And so would genetic screening and counseling in my country, seeing as the state is obliged to provide people with health care, and looking for risk factors is quite an obvious way of reducing health care costs - or improving the overall quality of life for fixed costs - in the long run. The same argument goes for vaccinations, of course.
Liberalism tends to support the idea that we must work together to solve the world's problems
Oh, it doesn't do any such thing - unless you're a US Republican, you know, one of those people known for their mind-boggling ideas, notions, and idiosyncratic terminology.
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seeing as the state is obliged to provide people with health care,
No, it is not. I am unaware of any such obligation; the mere requirement in Obamacare that you have healthcare was fought heavily in court, and was ONLY ruled constitutional by excusing it as a tax (pay a penalty if you do not). That the state actually be required to insure you is about 10 steps beyond that and would surely have been ruled unconstitutional.
Are you even from the US? If not, perhaps best not to comment on our system of government, as you clearly dont understand it.
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No, it is not. I am unaware of any such obligation; the mere requirement in Obamacare that you have healthcare was fought heavily in court
I wrote "in my country", quite clearly, actually. Perhaps you live somewhere else? Or you simply think that Obamacare applies to European jurisdictions - apparently, many Americans would want their legislation to apply world-wide, going as far to stage coups and military interventions, but I hope there's not enough stupidity in the world to allow for that.
Are you even from the US? If not, perhaps best not to comment on our system of government
No, I'm not, and I'd never comment on that because obscenities are generally frowned upon in the public forum. Fortunately, this is a medical and scientif
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Scalia's job is to determine what the law says and whether it was violated, not to make medical decisions. Whether something is "mandatory" is absolutely political, and there are a number of things that you may think are medically good ideas that would be incredibly out of bounds for Congress to legislate.
Again, you do not understand US law, so you need to stop pretending you do.
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Why would universal sequencing imply a database?
Exactly. That's like saying just because the NSA is collecting email and phone logs they are also indexing it all and searching for patterns and... Shit... Nevermind.
Oh, right, that's because thats to protect us. It's not like sequencing every kid's DNA is going to be used to correlate behavior to genetic traits and... Shit.... forget I said anything.
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So there will be a universal database of sequenced genomes from this generation, on
Why would universal sequencing imply a database? You can get it on a media the same way you get a birth certificate. If you lose it, your problem (at least the genome can be re-sequenced, unlike other kinds of medical records).
It will be supported by liberals to "save the children"
How obviously reasonable medical regulations and procedures correspond with "liberalism" or "non-liberalism" is beyond me. I have yet to see "liberal" and "non-liberal" doctors - so far, I haven't seen any such dichotomy in my country. Doctors around here seem to be very uniform in how they deal with their work (which could be an artifact of our socialistic past, but still, I just can't see any one of them rejecting useful and money-saving preventative measures).
If the data isn't going to be stored, then why use it? Sure, you will know your genome (unless you lose it), but why should the government mandate this. You can go pay for it and get it done now. No, the only reason to do it to everyone is so it is stored and tracked, either for future research purposes, or more sinister reasons.
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If the data isn't going to be stored, then why use it? Sure, you will know your genome (unless you lose it), but why should the government mandate this. You can go pay for it and get it done now. No, the only reason to do it to everyone is so it is stored and tracked, either for future research purposes, or more sinister reasons.
It's obviously going to be stored somewhere precisely because you will want to use it - I've said that you will have your own data, not that the sequencer's output will be permanently redirected to /dev/null. As far as the reasons are concerned - no, the real reason is that the more we'll know about genetic precursors for diseases, the more targeted health care we'll be able to provide to people and the cheaper the overall costs will be. Truth is that right now, we can do only fairly simple things - detecti
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"Why would universal sequencing imply a database? "
Because they can and do collect any information on anybody. Right now it's big with law enforcement( called just sticking the head in).
Next there will be a medical " need" for everyones genes and the doors fly all the way open for any corrupt "reason" to utilize this from faux disease curing to
hybridizing only perfect humans and any other garbage you can think of with the tagline "for the good of mankind" while meaning "good for those in power".
No, it's a b
No. (Score:5, Interesting)
If no compelling medical issue requires sequencing in a newborn, it is invasive and coercive to conduct it.
Any possible beneficial result is overshadowed by the inevitable abuse and misuse of the results. All I can see is creating a brand for each new child that will influence and determine decisions that may in fact have no significant scientific bearing. Predisposition is not certainty, and decisions based on uncertainty are, well, stupid.
I'll be damned if I want my grandchildren automatically genome-branded by the government to the detriment of their education, employment, and insurability.
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If no compelling medical issue requires sequencing in a newborn, it is invasive and coercive to conduct it.
Why? They might have some genetic problem which will appear later in life.
The real problem isn't the medical implications, it's the fact that we know the government is going to want a copy of the data (for the baby's own protection, of course...)
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The question really is: Is there a compelling medical reason to sequence a newborn?
I know the VA was looking into the possibility of sequencing all military personnel. The idea was if military personnel had it coming in, then it could be analyzed and they could start predicting which medicines would work well for that person and which wouldn't. To have that all known upfront could make battlefield medicine a whole lot more effective, reduce the chances of allergic reactions, and provide better care.
In som
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ncidentally, when ObamaCare was being debated, most of the people I know familiar with this hoped that health insurance would be nationalized (for other reasons), but a convenient side effect would be it would quickly be cost effective to sequence the average American's DNA allowing them to provide better care.
Nationalized healthcare/insurance ore even mandating private insurance cover it doesn't make it any more cost effective. It simply solves the problem of who is going to pay for it. If the process isn't cost effective or the cost benefit ratio is poor, nationalizing the payment doesn't change that.
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No, the problem is that there is no mechanism to punish the government when it does such stuff, other than revolution.
That mechanism has to be created.
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No, the problem is that there is no mechanism to punish the government when it does such stuff, other than revolution.
That mechanism has to be created.
That mechanism already exists, it's called a ballot box. However, it is often far too late for the people actually harmed by the government.
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Re:No. (Score:5, Insightful)
You worry about insurance companies getting accurate data so that they can compute the true cost of the risk that a customer carries. If you feel that isn't appropriate, then what you want is not insurance. Insurance is the pricing of risk. What you want is pooled expenses, which is what government programs is about - despite the wide-spread misunderstanding, that's not the service that insurance is supposed to offer. Insurance prices your individual risk while pooled expenses lets everyone pay for other people's risk. The two are fundamentally different. If you oppose giving insurance companies accurate information, then you are saying, whether you know it or not, that you don't want health care to be handled using an insurance model - you want a government solution using pooled expenses. Which would also solve your problem of worrying about insurability.
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Insurance is the pricing of what people can be convinced is reasonable pricing given the risk--which they by design can't evaluate. In reality, the insurance companies trend toward taking no risk whatsoever, as the risk model trends to sufficiently comprehensive to quantify and build into the price all risks plus an arbitrary profit. Eventually, along this track, insurance becomes simply a savings system for the risk eventuality which is statistically simply a very bad
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If the fire insurance company could predict that your house would burn down, costing $300000, they'd charge you $300000 plus profit, and fire insurance would be totally useless. Contrary to what you are saying, pooled expenses is the only reason that insurance is useful at all.
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Insurance only works because the company's predictive model is imperfect. The better their model gets, the less useful it is to the customers.
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I can only translate what you're saying to mean that on the one hand that insurance is expensive because the company has to coverage its statistically imperfect prediction of it's costs. And on the other hand that has they perfect their prediction of their expenses they will charge the customers more?
Insurance (Score:3)
The initial example captures it quite well, but let me break it down for you:
Insurance companies are in the business of making money, they do this by charging you more than they ever expect to pay out. If they could predict the future with 100% accuracy then they would charge you a rate at which they would collect 100% of the expenses you will incur, plus profit.
Since they can't predict that accurately they instead spread the risk around - if everyone has an unpredictable 5% risk of incurring $100,000 in c
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Good lord, this is horribly wrong.
The entire purpose of insurance is to pool risk, not price it. Pricing it is just part of the mechanics insurance companies have to go through to profitably allow us to pool risk. Let's say I have a 1% chance of getting in a car accident costing $100,000 this year. That would be ruinous for most folks, so we created companies that will take $1000 + some profit from everyone, every year and pay for the loss. We trade an unlikely horrible event for a guaranteed manageable
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When we do it your way, it doesn't work at all. People who aren't going to need insurance will get it really cheap. People who do will be unable to afford it.
That is exactly how insurance is supposed to work. If you aren't high-risk, there is no reason for you to pay a lot for insurance. Conversely, if you are high-risk, you should pay more, because you're expected to cost more. Insurance isn't a charity or transfer scheme, it's a way to take a risk and make it into a fixed cost. Instead of a 0.1% chance of paying $1,000,000, you pay $1,000. The expected cost (risk * cost) does not change, apart from overhead.
The only way it works at all is either if you sign up before any risk assessments like this can be done ...
Exactly. The proper time to take out insurance on a c
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With perfect risk assessment being possible, no insurance company would issue a policy until that assessment was done...
Accurate assessment has a cost as well, both to perform the assessment and in losing customers who aren't willing to complete it. It is always possible to compensate for uncertainty in the assessment by assuming a higher level of risk, constrained on one side by the actual cost to the insurance company and on the other by competition for insurance customers. If insurance companies always waited for perfect information there would be no insurance companies.
... once the assessment does get done, anyone that knows they are not at risk, will just cancel their policy once they know they are not at risk.
In the pre-conception insurance policies I was refer
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If no compelling medical issue requires sequencing in a newborn, it is invasive and coercive to conduct it.
What if the baby might have some condition that is better treated as early as possible? Does that not count as a "compelling medical issue"?
Are blood samples not already taken from newborns anyway? If so, genetic testing doesn't seem any more "invasive".
However, I agree that indeed my concern is that the data will be kept on file and used for purposes other than medical treatment - I like the idea of the medical profession having lots of genetic data on file; I don't like the idea of the government (and b
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Problem there is even if the current government doesn't allow 3rd party access to the DNA database, would the next congress/administration share the same vision?
Indeed. I would be happy for DNA to be sequenced at birth, analysed for any conditions that need immediate treatment, and then the only copy given to the parents for safe keeping (not that I think the general public are especially good at doing the "safe keeping" thing, unfortunately). Keeping all the data in a database is problematic for exactly the reason you state.
How long until someone decides its ok for 3rd party researchers to access the data for 'medical study'?
For *actual* medical studies, this is pretty good - if you can provide the anonymised DNA sequence along side anonymised medical records the
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That doesn't solve the insurance problem. The insurance company would demand disclosure of the DNA and use it to deny coverage or charge more. Just the fact that you have the information sitting in your drawer would be enoug
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That doesn't solve the insurance problem. The insurance company would demand disclosure of the DNA and use it to deny coverage or charge more.
That goes for any diagnostic tool that would spot illnesses in their earliest stages though doesn't it? What is needed is regulation of the insurance companys to reduce the scope of their discrimination.
If you don't have it, it's much harder for the insurance company to demand it
Or they will simply demand you get sequenced before giving you insurance...
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What is needed is regulation of the insurance companys to reduce the scope of their discrimination.
Discrimination, at least insofar as it relates to risk, is pretty much the entire point of an insurance company. Assessing actuarial risk to determine the expected cost of insuring someone is fundamental to the job. If you want charity rather than insurance, just say so; please don't ruin actual insurance for those who want it.
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Insurance is useless for those who don't have risk. Paying insurance to cover you against diabetes would be stupid if you could see through a DNA test that you will never get it.
Exactly. Insurance isn't meant to cover those who without risk, any more than it's meant to cover those facing a known cost. It's for the cases in between, where you have a low risk of a high cost and would prefer a predictable premium.
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What is needed is regulation of the insurance companys to reduce the scope of their discrimination.
Discrimination, at least insofar as it relates to risk, is pretty much the entire point of an insurance company.
No, it isn't.
For the customer, excessive discrimination is a bad thing: if the insurance company can determine your risk with 100% accuracy then you are _guaranteed_ to be paying over what it would've cost to self-insure. So the higher the insurer's accuracy WRT discrimination, the worse it is for the consumer.
On the other hand, assessing risk accurately is very good for the insurance company, because out-pricing the customers who are most likely to need insurance and retaining those who don't need it is g
Re: No. (Score:2)
I'll be damned if I want my grandchildren automatically genome-branded by the government to the detriment of their education, employment, and insurability.
No one wants the reality you speak of, we've already implemented laws to prevent this. The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008. Furthermore The Americans with Disabilities Act extends to individuals with genetic disabilities. Additionally affirmative action applies to any organization receiving federal funding.
Viruses and many other things can mutate DNA, I don't see a downside in making a backup copy of yourself.
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Oh, like the government actually obeys it's own laws? I almost spit my lunch laughing at that one.
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No one wants the reality you speak of, we've already implemented laws to prevent this. The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008. Furthermore The Americans with Disabilities Act extends to individuals with genetic disabilities. Additionally affirmative action applies to any organization receiving federal funding.
Viruses and many other things can mutate DNA, I don't see a downside in making a backup copy of yourself.
It would be fun to get my genetic profile and have it indicate that we are all African-Americans. Woot!
The paternity problem. (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem of the screams and arguments when the father finds out at the hospital that the child isn't biologically his.
Even 1% [wikipedia.org] will mean that the report won't automatically be given to the parents, or perhaps only a synopsis.
Re:The paternity problem. (Score:5, Insightful)
It shouldn't be legally possible for a person to make a decision about whether to take on legal parental responsibilities while being possibly deceived about whether they are the biological parent. That situation is no different, not in any relevant way, than getting a switched baby home from the hospital - something everyone can obviously see is horrible when it happens to women. So automatic parental certainty as a consequence of such DNA tests isn't a problem - it's a solution to a problem.
Re:The paternity problem. (Score:5, Interesting)
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USD25M for a study? (Score:2)
How can a study of ethical issues cost that much?
Dematerialization (Score:1, Funny)
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No "I" for obvious reasons if you've seen the film
Or know anything about DNA.
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Inborn Errors of Metabolism testing. (Score:3)
The article linked briefly mentioned the existing newborn screening program (Inborn errors of metabolism screening), but I'd like to discuss it a bit further. This is a long-existing program in the US which is administered at the state level, which means the particular regulations and included diseases vary; some states have far more extensive testing than others.
The program is mandatory (usually with some form of parental opt-out), and checks for certain rare genetic diseases, the proto-typical example of which was phenylketonuria [wikipedia.org] -- a metabolic defect that will lead to seizures and mental retardation if allowed to progress, but if treated early (by adhering to a strict diet) will allow a for a relatively normal level of intelligence and life-span. As time and medical understanding progressed, numerous other diseases have been recommended as well:
http://www.acog.org/Resources%20And%20Publications/Committee%20Opinions/Committee%20on%20Genetics/Newborn%20Screening.aspx [acog.org]
From a public health perspective, one issue is that the cost of the program has to be balanced against the relative benefit; since each new test added is state-wide, the cost quickly adds up. And, everyone likes saving babies (especially disease-specific foundations, lawyers, and politicians), there's pressure to add conditions which are extremely rare, to the point that one additional "saved" baby can cost multi-millions of dollars.
While a sequencing at birth could potentially replace most of these individual tests, there's quite a bit of scope for feature-creep as to what is required to be done with the data afterwards. I could see this becoming very expensive indeed.
Gattaca (Score:1)
Yeah...Thansks but no thanks. (Score:3)
I'm not having my children's DNA available to be cataloged and searched by anyone. I'll let them decide that when they're adults.
LK
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Re: Insurance company cheating? (Score:3)
Genetic database (Score:3)
Expungement of DNA from arrestees (Score:1)
Some states allow arrestees who are no longer facing charges to get their entire arrest record expunged or sealed, including fingerprint and DNA test results. Typically they have to wait until charges have been dismissed "with prejudice" or until the statute of limitations has expired, which is usually 3-10 years for low-level felonies and up to "never" for murder and some other high-level felonies.
Granted, this isn't as good as having the information destroyed entirely, but it's a start.
promise vs ethical challenges (Score:3)
Who wants to bet they're going to spend a lot more time and energy on the "promise" than they will on the "ethical challenges"?
How did our species survive so long without this innovation? We better get right on this.
Invidivual vs. population and genetic monoculture (Score:2)