What Are You Doing with My DNA?
The play “Informed Consent” explores deep ethical questions in genetics research
By(from left) DeLanna Studi and Tina Benko in the Primary Stages and Ensemble Studio Theatre/Alfred P. Sloan Foundation production of by Deborah Zoe Laufer, directed by Liesl Tommy, at Primary Stages at The Duke on 42nd Street.
Twelve years ago, members of the Havasupai Tribe with Arizona State University, over the ways in which school researchers were using blood samples from tribe members without proper informed consent. The case halted the research and the university returned the blood to the tribe, along with financial compensation. The scuffle became a landmark case in bioethics.
The Havasupai case and earlier studies such the and the highlight the serious harm that can be done when participants do not fully understand the study they are signing up for. Many years have passed since those events, yet the struggle to define proper informed consent remains an issue today, and one that is growing because researchers are collecting biological material at a larger scale than ever before. all around the world, where investigators gather samples from patients and the general population. Some samples are kept for decades, making it impossible to know exactly what they will be used for in the future. may hold up to 100,000 biological samples.
Privacy issues have also grown in recent years because of new services such as . Lack of rules and regulation about how researchers – or other interested parties – will use the large amounts of information they are accumulating poses an even greater issue.
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