2013
DOI: 10.1007/s12687-013-0172-y
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Captious certainties: makings, meanings and misreadings of consumer-oriented genetic testing

Abstract: Members of the scientific and medical communities concerned with genetic testing might wonder, why cultural and ethical analyses of genetic testing are increasing again, especially since legal frameworks have, by now, come to provide more solid grounds for the routine application of genetic testing on both levels of application, diagnostics, and prediction. This contribution aims to shed light on the changing concept of genetic testing as it is raised by novel cultural practices and perceptions mainly triggere… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Demographic factors such as ethnicity, younger age, both gender and education had been associated with non‐consent and greater privacy concerns . Public attitudes may be influenced by notions such as genetic exceptionalism (the idea that genetic data were different and riskier than other health data) and related concerns about genetic predictions such that there were worries for themselves, their kin, fears about possible discrimination, generalization of such data to families and communities, and the lack of control over one's genome . While the public may hold different and varying attitudes over time concerning genetic and genomic studies, future studies need to take into account the population's prevailing attitude concerning any aspect of genetic research and the future use of such tissue samples collected .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Demographic factors such as ethnicity, younger age, both gender and education had been associated with non‐consent and greater privacy concerns . Public attitudes may be influenced by notions such as genetic exceptionalism (the idea that genetic data were different and riskier than other health data) and related concerns about genetic predictions such that there were worries for themselves, their kin, fears about possible discrimination, generalization of such data to families and communities, and the lack of control over one's genome . While the public may hold different and varying attitudes over time concerning genetic and genomic studies, future studies need to take into account the population's prevailing attitude concerning any aspect of genetic research and the future use of such tissue samples collected .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such prohibition would, however, also prevent medical improvements, inhibit technological progress and would thus constitute a handicap in international competition between states (Oh et al, 2021 ). Furthermore, medical certainties can also be created without the use of AI, e.g., by making use of genetic testing (Paul et al, 2014 ). Ultimately, banning such useful technologies seems problematic from the perspective of liberal and democratic states, making it a rare exception that can only be considered for extreme cases, such as the editing of the human germline genome (Boggio et al, 2019 ).…”
Section: Using Bans or Limits To Counteract Adverse Selection?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Respondents were asked: "DTC-GT for disease-related purposes is…," with the following answer items: beneficial to the health of the user -harmful to the health of the user, beneficial for society -harmful for society, leading to healthier lifestyle of its users -leading to unhealthier lifestyle of its users, leading to increased feelings of privacy of the userleading to decreased feelings of privacy of the user, ethical -unethical, useful -not useful, reassuring -frightening, importantnot important. These items were based on previously reported attributes towards DTC-GT [18][19][20][21][22][23] combined with expert opinion. Negative items were reverse scored so that a higher score represents a more positive attitude.…”
Section: Independent Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%