The Ethics of Genetic Screening
Sold by Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, United Kingdom
AbeBooks Seller since March 25, 2015
New - Hardcover
Condition: New
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Add to basketSold by Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, United Kingdom
AbeBooks Seller since March 25, 2015
Condition: New
Quantity: Over 20 available
Add to basketMuch of the discussion of bioethics throughout the world focuses on defending one or another of these positions, to the neglect of understanding the experiences of people who are caught inside the screening net. This book is strongest when it turns to the impact of genetic screening on real lives. A child who undergoes genetic screening thereby loses the opportunity to make his or her own decision about testing later in life. A screening program for maple syrup urine disease among members of the Bedouin tribe resulted in male carriers marrying outside the tribe and female carriers being stigmatized, remaining unmarried, and being little valued. A Swedish screening program to identify children especially susceptible to lung disease from cigarette smoke so affected the families that the fathers of identified children ended up smoking more rather than less.
By demonstrating how genetic information affects people's lives, this book provides the background for asking numerous questions. For instance, how can a person's privacy and autonomy best be protected when genetic information about him or her can be collected and stored before birth? Should genetic analyses be done only in specifically licensed facilities? Are there certain forms of genetic technology that should be forbidden altogether? Are there others whose use should be mandatory? (All Greek Cypriots, for example, must provide proof of having undergone genetic testing for thalassemia before they can obtain a marriage license.)
The book is also strong when it holds a mirror up to clinical geneticists. Although most geneticists and counselors -- particularly in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Canada -- say they are nondirective, analysis of transcripts of actual counseling sessions found that counselors tell clients what is "best" for them an average of 5.8 times per session.
The data on patients and professionals in this book indicate a need to move beyond abstract bioethical discussions and toward a greater understanding of the decisions and actions of the participants in genetic health services. The medical, philosophical, and sociological perspectives presented in The Ethics of Genetic Screening are a useful starting point, but much more work needs to be done. Chadwick and Wiesing make the point well: "If an example of the need for multidisciplinary work was needed, the case of genetic screening would provide it. It shows again how practical ethics has to proceed if it does not want to become futile."
Lori B. Andrews, J.D.
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