June 19, 2008
California Dead Set Against Direct-to-Consumer Genetics
So, apparently I'm a complete and total sadomasochist who likes listen to health officials discourse on compliance issues with phlebotomy programs and CLS (what is that, even?) certification. I've been sitting here listening to the conference call of California health department conference call that Alexis Madrigal mentioned in his Wired post on the state's stance against direct-to-consumer genetic testing companies like 23andMe. I was after some sense of the thinking behind the position. My takeaway: California's health officials firmly believe that consumers just aren't capable of handling knowledge of their DNA unless it's mediated by a medical professional. Here's the flavor of the call from some notes I jotted down. The speaker is Dr. Karen Nickel, the head of California's laboratory field services program:
Genetic tests cannot be self ordered. [Direct-to-consumer genetic testing] puts us between a rock and a hard place...We're concerned about genetic businesses ordering tests from licensed labs without a physicians order...We've been dealing with this for six months now. We have investigated and this week sent cease-and-desist orders to thirteen of them for violating state law. This is very serious. We have consulted with legal and have full department support for this...We started this week no longer tolerating direct-to-consumer genetic testing in California.
The public demand for access has created the 'worried well.'
We need to clarify diagnostic vs. predictive reports. Many of these businesses will give 67% chance of colon cancer, 27% chance of this or that. Once they get the results they don't know what to do about it. So that's the state perspective. [Emphasis added.]
What I think makes this fascinating is that direct-to-consumer genetic testing is a clear case of what technology makes possible running smack up against the government's ideas of what should be possible. Sure, these are California officials, but think of it as the east coast mindset confronting the west coast one. So is this a minor setback for genetic-testing companies like 23andMe or a major hurdle?
23andMe, genetics, social genomics
June 12, 2008
23andMe's Sly Eugenics Joke
23andMe is a Google-backed web-based genetic mapping start-up. In doing some research for a story pitch I was just watching a cartoony Genetics 101 video they have up on their site. Something caught my eye. Check out the first line of "gibberish" on the sheet supposed to represent the genetic code being passed from one generation to the next. It's a little joke on those of us might be a little wary of the idea of gene mapping:
Heh. "Gattac(c)a" -- the Ethan Hawke movie about a society based on genetic determinism. Clever.
UPDATE: I should be clearer. The letters in the DNA sheet aren't completely random -- they represent the DNA bases Adenine, Cytosine, Guanine, and Thymine. It's the arrangement here that's funny.
23andMe, social genomics
June 18, 2008
DNA C&Ds
Interesting. California's Department of Health Services has sent cease-and-desist letters to a number of direct-to-consumer genetic companies, including the Google-backed 23andMe. The complaint is that by offering personal DNA profiling these companies are engaging in a medical act without a doctor's involvement. What's the precedence for the government limiting access to the information it's otherwise possible to know about oneself? Wired's Thomas Goetz tells the state to step off:
To me, this reflects as much a cultural disagreement as a legal or regulatory one. That is, there is the assumption in the states' letters that, because genetic information has medical implications, the dissemination of this information must fall under their jurisdiction.
But there are, in fact, all sorts of areas in life that have medical implications that we don't consider the province of government -- a pregnancy test, most obviously. We neither want nor assume that doctors should have a gatekeeper role in establishing whether we are or are not pregnant, nor do we look to the state to protect us from that information. Pregnancy is a part of life, and it has all sorts of implications and ramifications. So too with DNA.
23andMe, genetics, social genomics
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