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Genome Sequencing For Babies Brings Knowledge And Conflicts

ISG fellow Stefan Timmermans is a contributing scientist on NPR’s “All Things Considered” discussing whole genome sequencing for babies.  Parents who have their babies tested are faced with many questions, such as if and when to tell the child that all their genetic information is available or whether they, the parents, want to know all their child’s genetic information themselves. Read/Listen…

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Turkey Trouble: Genetics Gone Too Far?

Regular old selective breeding can create monsters like the industrial turkey, giant with grotesquely over-sized breasts and muscles. This raises the obvious ethical question:  Just because we can breed this turkey, should we?  The turkey lives a short, miserable life but we get an affordable, healthy source of protein. It is obvious which choice we’ve made as a society, but…

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Matching DNA With Medical Records To Crack Disease And Aging

A massive research project in California is beginning to show how genes, health habits and the environment can interact to cause diseases.   The project’s goal is to find new ways to identify people at risk before they develop problems like heart disease, cancer and diabetes.  100,000 individual members of Kaiser Permanente’s health plan agreed to share their health and genetic information…

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Enforce Pooper-Scooper Rules With DNA Testing?

A company called Poo Prints claims Dallas and other cities can find irresponsible dog owners by lab testing feces.  The company sells $29.95 DNA kits that come with a swab to take an oral sample from a pet that is then recorded in a world pet registry. Poo Prints sells $49.95 testing kits to sample dog waste, which can be matched…

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Scientists Encourage Genetic Data Sharing

Robert Cook-Deegan (Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA) and colleagues explain that whole genome analysis has the potential to significantly improve medical care if utilized correctly, but say that interpreting variants of unknown significance can prove challenging.  Private genetic databases run by companies, such as Myriad Genetics in the USA, contain important information that may be vital to interpreting such variants, but…

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