2013
DOI: 10.1038/gim.2013.24
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Preserving personal autonomy in a genomic testing era

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Cited by 14 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…So-called negative results did not determine patient attitudes. This fact contrasts importantly with a common equation by medical professionals of success with clinical actionability, giving cost some consideration as well (Sanderson et al 2005;Green et al 2013;Berg et al 2011;Lindor et al 2013). Rather than merely on a calculus of clinically actionable outcomes and costs (Bunnik et al 2014;Grosse Scott and Muin Khoury 2006;Porter 2010), patients based the value of genomic sequencing on psychosocial outcomes as well.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…So-called negative results did not determine patient attitudes. This fact contrasts importantly with a common equation by medical professionals of success with clinical actionability, giving cost some consideration as well (Sanderson et al 2005;Green et al 2013;Berg et al 2011;Lindor et al 2013). Rather than merely on a calculus of clinically actionable outcomes and costs (Bunnik et al 2014;Grosse Scott and Muin Khoury 2006;Porter 2010), patients based the value of genomic sequencing on psychosocial outcomes as well.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Genomic-based individualized medicine is increasingly becoming incorporated into clinical care. Medical professionals who use this new tool often equate the utility of genomic sequencing with the clinical actionability of its results (Sanderson et al 2005;Green et al 2013;Berg et al 2011;Lindor et al 2013). The usefulness of sequencing in the eyes of these professionals tends to depend on their ability not merely to make meaning of the test results (analytical utility) but also to act on them for the benefit of the patient (clinical utility or medically actionable).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an ethical deliberation of the role of disease characteristics in the disclosure of personal genome testing results, Bunnik et al [5] identified 4 relevant disease characteristics in susceptibility testing as follows: severity, actionability, age of onset, and psychiatric versus somatic diseases. Our team at the Mayo Center for Individualized Medicine also undertook a multidisciplinary binning process which was briefly compared/contrasted to Berg's bins, demonstrating overlap but also differences [6]. …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of course, this situation is modeled and the law enforcement agencies of most states do not have formal grounds for refusing to hire such a person. However, there are such cases in practice [32], and they can violate the confidentiality of information on the results of the human genome diagnostics. Such confidential information can be disclosed in many ways: from mere data exchange between different laboratories or organizations required for the research [33] to the illegal collection of these data and subsequent speculation for mercenary purposes.…”
Section: Legal Problems Of Protecting Information About the Human Genomementioning
confidence: 99%