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The Stored Tissue Issue: Biomedical Research, Ethics, and Law in the Era of Genomic Medicine
 
 
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The Stored Tissue Issue: Biomedical Research, Ethics, and Law in the Era of Genomic Medicine [Hardcover]

Robert F. Weir (Author), Robert S. Olick (Author), Jeffrey C. Murray (Contributor)

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Book Description

May 20, 2004 0195123689 978-0195123685 1
Genetics research with stored human tissues provides many benefits and holds much promise. Yet how this critical research is conducted sometimes raises serious ethical, legal, and social concerns, and it is difficult to balance the promise of biomedical research with our time-honored commitments to individual choice in such fundamental matters as control over personal health information and the disposition of our bodily tissues.
Weir and Olick provide a thorough analysis of this critical phase in the era of genomic medicine. While strongly supportive of the biomedical research enterprise, they develop a critique of many common research practices with banked tissues, DNA, and genetic data. Noting numerous examples of beneficial human tissue research, they focus on problematic research practices, controversial cases, and federal and institutional policies that limit the informed choices of patients and research participants. The authors offer a series of recommendations intended to limit the risks of inadequate informed consent to research for individuals, families, and groups, and to strengthen the bonds of trust between the research enterprise and the public upon which biomedical progress depends.
This book offers a wealth of information plus well-reasoned recommendations that will be of keen interest to geneticists, other biomedical scientists, research institutions, policymakers, students and others. It will serve as a clarion call to move beyond traditional policies and practices toward a richer understanding of partnership between patients and research participants and the biomedical research enterprise - a partnership for the benefit of all.

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Editorial Reviews

From The New England Journal of Medicine

During the past decade, national, regional, and international organizations and advisory bodies, bioethicists, patient advocates, and biomedical researchers have examined the legal, ethical, and social implications of collecting, storing, and conducting research with human-tissue samples. In The Stored Tissue Issue, Weir and Olick assess the ongoing debates about and controversy over the need for and specificity of informed consent; the privacy, confidentiality, and ownership issues related to samples and the genetic information derived from them; and the extent to which commercial profits should be shared with persons and communities that give their genetic material to researchers. Although Weir and Olick cover familiar terrain, a key feature of the book is their critical analysis of the recommendations by the National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC) in its report, "Research Involving Human Biological Materials: Ethical Issues and Policy Guidance." Weir and Olick contend that the NBAC failed to achieve "the right balance" between the desire to protect persons who give researchers their tissue and genetic material and the goal of promoting biomedical research. For instance, the authors note that when the interests of persons are in conflict with the interests of researchers on matters of informed consent, the NBAC consistently offers policy recommendations that favor the interests of biomedical researchers. The authors assert that such recommendations underplay the mutual interests that both parties have in controlling the conditions of tissue research, as well as the importance of individual choice as a key feature of the principle of informed consent. Indeed, Weir and Olick point out that surveys of public opinion indicate that people want information about how researchers propose to use their genetic samples, and they want control over the uses to which their samples will be put. Weir and Olick also show that the recommendations of the NBAC do not reflect some of the common themes found in several international policy statements. Among these are the notion of human dignity, the right of people to control how their samples are used, and the commercial aspects of research that involves the use of genetic samples. Drawing from these themes, the authors issue a list of recommendations that differ from the NBAC approach, particularly with regard to informed consent. They recommend that researchers and institutions disclose detailed information about policies that concern the collection, storage, use, privacy, and commercial benefit of genetic samples; that institutional review boards have a more active role in overseeing research that involves stored samples; and that institutions provide institutional review boards with the resources they need to do a thorough and responsible job. Weir and Olick recommend that U.S. regulations on human research require disclosure by researchers about financial conflicts of interest and commercial gain, strengthen the requirements for informed consent in tissue research, state explicitly that persons have a right to self-determination over the use of their samples, require community consultation as well as community approval and individual consent for the collection of genetic samples from identifiable groups, and redefine the standard for minimal risk of harm so that potential psychosocial injuries and adverse effects on groups as a result of research with genetic samples are included in the definition. The authors say that their recommendations are "intended to be reasonable, realistic, and productive of significant change" toward improving the practices used in the collection and storage of tissue samples and the research that involves them. What Weir and Olick do not say is whether the growing list of conflicting recommendations can be brought into harmony at the national and international levels and how such harmony can be accomplished. Nonetheless, as research with banked tissues and genetic material and data continues to increase, all who hold a stake in this area should give careful attention to the authors' assessment of the problematic ethical issues and their call for greater collaboration among researchers, institutions, and persons who participate in tissue research. Karen J. Maschke, Ph.D.
Copyright © 2004 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved. The New England Journal of Medicine is a registered trademark of the MMS.

Review


"The strength of this book is its thoroughness.... those seeking a comprehensive overview of ethical and legal issues in stored tissue research will find much to explore." --IRB: Ethics and Human Research


"...all who hold a stake in this area should give careful attention to the author's assessment of the problematic ethical issues and their call for greater collaboration among researchers, institutions, and persons who participate in tissue research." --The New England Journal of Medicine


"5 Stars. Perfect Score!." --Doody's


"The authors have made a huge contribution to the field of medical humanities in The Stored Tissue Issue. Pulling from real world examples, they delve into the many different types of research currently being performed."--Medical Humanities Review



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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The importance of biomedical research with human tissue samples can hardly be doubted. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
human tissue research, anonymizing samples, research with stored tissues, neonatal blood spot cards, derived tissue samples, secondary research purposes, anonymized samples, tissue research studies, stored tissue research, other biomedical investigators, prospective research participants, million tissue specimens, research advance directives, objectionable research, stored tissue samples, human tissue studies, research involving human biological materials, genetics investigators, banked samples, banked tissues, prospective authorization, familial genetic information, newborn screening laboratories, planned research study, potential research participants
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, New York, Common Rule, Nuffield Council, Health Council, National Bioethics Advisory Commission, John Moore, Privacy Rule, University of Iowa, Genetic Privacy Act, College of American Pathologists, New Jersey, Supreme Court, Ellen Wright Clayton, Iowa City, Human Genome Project, University of California, African Americans, Hum Genet, Law Med Ethics, Patient Privacy, American College of Medical Genetics, Eliot Marshall, George Annas, Handbook of Human Tissue Sources
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