Why the rise of DNA testing is creating challenges — and an opportunity
By Noura Abul-Husn,
STAT
| 03. 29. 2023
Twenty years ago, virtually all people seeking genetic testing were individuals diagnosed with diseases possibly linked to their genetic makeup. Today, millions of people order genetic tests to learn about their ancestry, as well as to understand what their genes say about their future health.
This rapid growth has created what some might see as a big problem and others might see as an opportunity. The problem? There hasn’t been a corresponding increase in genetics education and training health care providers about it, meaning that many people are reaching out to health care providers who are ill-prepared to incorporate genetic test results into clinical practice. The opportunity? Results from genetic testing can help health care providers engage with their patients on a deeper level about personal health risks, promoting health, and preventing disease.
Help may be on the horizon. A team representing the National Society of Genetic Counselors, an association of thousands of genetic counselors across the country, published guidance in early January for genetic counselors and other health care providers to handle what the authors call elective genomic testing...
Related Articles
By Katrina Northrop, The Washington Post | 04.06.2025
photo via Wikimedia Commons licensed under CC by 3.0
China's most infamous scientist is attempting a comeback. He Jiankui, who went to jail for three years after claiming he had created the world's first genetically altered babies, says he remains...
By Anumita Kaur [cites CGS’ Katie Hasson], The Washington Post | 03.25.2025
Genetic information company 23andMe has said that it is headed to bankruptcy court, raising questions for what happens to the DNA shared by millions of people with the company via saliva test kits.
Sunday’s announcement clears the way for a new...
By Peter Wehling, Tino Plümecke, and Isabelle Bartram
| 03.26.2025
This article was originally published as “Soziogenomik und polygene Scores” in issue 272 (February 2025) of the German-language journal Gen-ethischer Informationsdienst (GID); translated by the authors.
In mid-November 2024, the British organization Hope not Hate published its investigative research ‘Inside the Eugenics Revival’. In addition to documentating an active international “race research” network, the investigation also brought to light the existence of a US start-up that offers eugenic embryo selection. Heliospect Genomics aims to enable wealthy couples to...
By Frank Landymore, Futurism | 03.18.2025
You can only throw so much money at a problem.
This, more or less, is the line being taken by AI researchers in a recent survey. Asked whether "scaling up" current AI approaches could lead to achieving artificial general...