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A Just Genomics Needs an ELSI of Translation.

📅 December 1, 2024 👤 Halley Meghan C, Olson Nate W, Ashley Euan A et al. 📖 The Hastings Center report

🤖 Plain-English Summary

The rapid advances in genomics over the last decade have come to fruition amid intense public discussions of justice in medicine and health care. In this essay, we suggest that achieving a just genomics, both now and in the future, requires an explicit ELSI of translation-normative and pragmatic scholarship that embraces the interconnectedness of research and clinical care and centers the obligations of researchers, institutions, and funders to mitigate inequities throughout the translational pi...

🔑 Key Findings

  • While much emphasis has been placed on increasing diversity in genomics research participation, an overly narrow focus on recruitment eschews recognition of the disparities in health care that will ultimately shape access to the benefits of genomic medicine.
  • In this essay, we suggest that achieving a just genomics, both now and in the future, requires an explicit ELSI of translation-normative and pragmatic scholarship that embraces the interconnectedness of research and clinical care and centers the obligations of researchers, institutions, and funders to mitigate inequities throughout the translational pipeline.
  • We propose core principles to guide an ELSI of translation and to ensure that this work balances the value of the generalizable knowledge that genomics research generates and the value of the individuals and communities who make this research possible.

💡 Why This Matters

Understanding this could lead to better treatments, improved diagnostics, or a deeper grasp of how the human body works — benefiting patient care globally.

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📋 Article Details

Category 🧬 Medicine & Biology
Published Dec 01, 2024
Journal The Hastings Center report
Authors Halley Meghan C, Olson Nate W, Ashley Euan A, Goldenberg Aaron J, Tabor Holly K
DOI 10.1002/hast.4938
Source PubMed

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