Knowledge

Genetic exceptionalism

Source 📝

62:, which is highly penetrant) may justify special considerations for genetic exceptionalism, in that individuals with a high risk for developing this condition may face a certain amount of discrimination. However, for most common human health conditions, a specific genetic variant only plays a partial role, interacting with other genetic variants and environmental and lifestyle influences to contribute to disease development. In these cases, genetic information is often considered similarly to other medical and lifestyle data, such as smoking status, age, or 34:
without involving any medical professionals, but to obtain information about their genetic profile might require an order from a physician and expensive counseling sessions. Disclosure of an individual's genetic information or its meaning, such as telling a woman with red hair that she has a higher
58:
There is ongoing debate over whether or when certain genetic information should be considered exceptional. In some cases, the predictive power of genetic information (such as a risk for a disease like
46:
from individuals, their families, their employers, and the government. The approach builds upon the existing protection required of general health information provided by such laws as the
47: 204: 182: 101: 178: 214: 42:
That policy approach has been taken by state legislatures to safeguard individuals' genetic information in the
59: 191:
Includes a state-by-state summary table on genetic privacy laws, but information is not being updated.
20: 156: 80: 219: 148: 140: 209: 130: 75: 23:
is special and so must be treated differently from other types of medical data or other
186: 36: 31: 198: 43: 24: 160: 102:
UC Berkeley Halts Genetic Testing Program, but Touts Opportunity for Ethical Debate
135: 118: 35:
risk of skin cancer, has been legally restricted in some places, as providing
144: 63: 152: 30:
For example, patients are able to obtain information about their
119:"Genetic exceptionalism. Too much of a good thing?" 48:
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
8: 117:Evans, James P; Burke, Wylie (July 2008). 183:National Conference of State Legislatures 134: 93: 7: 83:, similar rules for HIV/AIDS testing 25:personally identifiable information 205:Health policy in the United States 14: 1: 100:Ray, Turna. 18 August 2010. 185:. March 2008. Archived from 136:10.1097/gim.0b013e31817f280a 236: 105:Pharmacogenomics Reporter 179:"Genetic Privacy Laws" 17:Genetic exceptionalism 123:Genetics in Medicine 60:Huntington's disease 215:Information privacy 21:genetic information 19:is the belief that 81:HIV exceptionalism 227: 190: 165: 164: 138: 114: 108: 98: 235: 234: 230: 229: 228: 226: 225: 224: 195: 194: 177: 174: 169: 168: 116: 115: 111: 99: 95: 90: 76:Genetic privacy 72: 56: 12: 11: 5: 233: 231: 223: 222: 217: 212: 207: 197: 196: 193: 192: 189:on 2002-09-20. 173: 172:External links 170: 167: 166: 129:(7): 500–501. 109: 92: 91: 89: 86: 85: 84: 78: 71: 68: 55: 52: 37:medical advice 32:blood pressure 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 232: 221: 218: 216: 213: 211: 208: 206: 203: 202: 200: 188: 184: 180: 176: 175: 171: 162: 158: 154: 150: 146: 142: 137: 132: 128: 124: 120: 113: 110: 106: 103: 97: 94: 87: 82: 79: 77: 74: 73: 69: 67: 65: 61: 54:Expert debate 53: 51: 49: 45: 44:United States 40: 38: 33: 28: 26: 22: 18: 187:the original 126: 122: 112: 104: 96: 57: 41: 29: 16: 15: 199:Categories 88:References 64:biomarkers 145:1098-3600 220:Genetics 161:32998031 153:18580684 70:See also 210:Privacy 159:  151:  143:  157:S2CID 149:PMID 141:ISSN 27:. 131:doi 66:. 201:: 181:. 155:. 147:. 139:. 127:10 125:. 121:. 50:. 39:. 163:. 133:: 107:.

Index

genetic information
personally identifiable information
blood pressure
medical advice
United States
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
Huntington's disease
biomarkers
Genetic privacy
HIV exceptionalism
UC Berkeley Halts Genetic Testing Program, but Touts Opportunity for Ethical Debate
"Genetic exceptionalism. Too much of a good thing?"
doi
10.1097/gim.0b013e31817f280a
ISSN
1098-3600
PMID
18580684
S2CID
32998031
"Genetic Privacy Laws"
National Conference of State Legislatures
the original
Categories
Health policy in the United States
Privacy
Information privacy
Genetics

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.