A DNA Database in the NHS: The End of Privacy?
By Helen Wallace,
Public Service Europe
| 12. 12. 2012
The government has announced plans to sequence the whole genomes of
100,000 patients in the NHS. This means every chemical letter in each person's DNA will be stored in their electronic medical records where it can be analysed statistically. Some, but not all, of the proposed group will be cancer patients and the project will also look at genetic mutations which arise in cancer cells as the cancer tumour grows.
The government says the project will be entirely voluntary as "patients will be able to opt out of having their genome sequenced without affecting their NHS care". But shifting to a system of "opt-out" rather than "opt-in" consent is hugely contentious. Opt-in consent – the international standard for patient care and research – requires people to be fully informed about how their data will be used and who will have access to it. But a new system of "presumed consent" to sharing electronic medical records with private companies was
proposed by David Cameron earlier this year. This means that when people give their samples they will not be...
Related Articles
By Françoise Baylis and Katie Hasson, The Conversation | 10.24.2024
By Fyodor Urnov, The CRIPSR Journal | 10.18.2024
The field of clinical gene editing has a bona fide crisis on its hands—a crisis that has to, and can be, promptly resolved.
An outside observer of our field might be surprised by this and say—what crisis? The first...
By Walt Bogdanich and Carson Kessler, The New York Times | 10.23.2024
By 2021, nearly 2,000 volunteers had answered the call to test an experimental Alzheimer’s drug known as BAN2401. For the drugmaker Eisai, the trial was a shot at a windfall — potentially billions of dollars — for defanging a disease...
By Gina Kolata, The New York Times | 10.21.2024
Kendric Cromer, 12, left Children’s National Hospital in a wheelchair on Wednesday, wearing a T-shirt and cap printed with designs from the anime series “Naruto” and a black face mask. Staff lined the hallway, cheering and waving noisemakers. He had...