Rethinking the ethical principles of genomic medicine services
Rethinking the ethical principles of genomic medicine services
Clinical genome and exome sequencing is currently used in only a small fraction of patients, yet large scale genomic initiatives are becoming more embedded in clinical services. This paper examines the ethical principles that should guide regulatory processes regarding consent and data sharing in this context. We argue that a genomic dataset administered by the health system carries substantial societal benefits, and that the collective nature of this initiative means that at least those patients who benefit from genome sequencing have an ethical obligation to share their health information. This obligation is grounded in considerations of fairness. Furthermore, we argue that the use of genomic data for the advancement of medical knowledge should be permitted without explicit consent and that international and other bodies should be granted access to these data, provided certain conditions are satisfied.
Codes of Ethics, Genetic Privacy/ethics, Genetic Services/ethics, Humans
147-154
Johnson, Stephanie B
8cd69975-02d0-4b74-8aef-90b30dfcb2f6
Slade, Ingrid
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Giubilini, Alberto
e88da222-fd21-49c0-ae97-e8a8d02a5e21
Graham, Mackenzie
49e7e435-dc84-4666-8080-5c63feb0d914
18 September 2019
Johnson, Stephanie B
8cd69975-02d0-4b74-8aef-90b30dfcb2f6
Slade, Ingrid
264e62f4-7c1e-4522-93f2-917de23e31d3
Giubilini, Alberto
e88da222-fd21-49c0-ae97-e8a8d02a5e21
Graham, Mackenzie
49e7e435-dc84-4666-8080-5c63feb0d914
Johnson, Stephanie B, Slade, Ingrid, Giubilini, Alberto and Graham, Mackenzie
(2019)
Rethinking the ethical principles of genomic medicine services.
European Journal of Human Genetics, 28 (2), .
(doi:10.1038/s41431-019-0507-1).
Abstract
Clinical genome and exome sequencing is currently used in only a small fraction of patients, yet large scale genomic initiatives are becoming more embedded in clinical services. This paper examines the ethical principles that should guide regulatory processes regarding consent and data sharing in this context. We argue that a genomic dataset administered by the health system carries substantial societal benefits, and that the collective nature of this initiative means that at least those patients who benefit from genome sequencing have an ethical obligation to share their health information. This obligation is grounded in considerations of fairness. Furthermore, we argue that the use of genomic data for the advancement of medical knowledge should be permitted without explicit consent and that international and other bodies should be granted access to these data, provided certain conditions are satisfied.
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Published date: 18 September 2019
Keywords:
Codes of Ethics, Genetic Privacy/ethics, Genetic Services/ethics, Humans
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Local EPrints ID: 506564
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506564
ISSN: 1018-4813
PURE UUID: efa1cd91-9c9e-4e32-820e-043530d1f93d
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Date deposited: 11 Nov 2025 17:50
Last modified: 15 Nov 2025 03:21
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Author:
Stephanie B Johnson
Author:
Ingrid Slade
Author:
Alberto Giubilini
Author:
Mackenzie Graham
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