27 results on '"Blasimme A"'
Search Results
2. Optimizing the Aging Brain: The BEAD Study on the Ethics of Dementia Prevention
- Author
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Andreoletti, M., Lazzaroni, C., Petersen, N., Segawa, S., Leibing, A., Schicktanz, S., and Blasimme, Alessandro
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Ethics review of big data research: What should stay and what should be reformed?
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Ferretti, Agata, Ienca, Marcello, Sheehan, Mark, Blasimme, Alessandro, Dove, Edward S, Farsides, Bobbie, Friesen, Phoebe, Kahn, Jeff, Karlen, Walter, Kleist, Peter, Liao, S Matthew, Nebeker, Camille, Samuel, Gabrielle, Shabani, Mahsa, Rivas Velarde, Minerva, and Vayena, Effy
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Humans ,Biomedical Research ,Ethics Committees ,Research ,Ethics ,Research ,Advisory Committees ,Big Data ,Big data ,Biomedical research ,Ethics ,Ethics review ,IRBs ,RECs ,Research ethics ,Generic health relevance ,Applied Ethics - Abstract
BackgroundEthics review is the process of assessing the ethics of research involving humans. The Ethics Review Committee (ERC) is the key oversight mechanism designated to ensure ethics review. Whether or not this governance mechanism is still fit for purpose in the data-driven research context remains a debated issue among research ethics experts.Main textIn this article, we seek to address this issue in a twofold manner. First, we review the strengths and weaknesses of ERCs in ensuring ethical oversight. Second, we map these strengths and weaknesses onto specific challenges raised by big data research. We distinguish two categories of potential weakness. The first category concerns persistent weaknesses, i.e., those which are not specific to big data research, but may be exacerbated by it. The second category concerns novel weaknesses, i.e., those which are created by and inherent to big data projects. Within this second category, we further distinguish between purview weaknesses related to the ERC's scope (e.g., how big data projects may evade ERC review) and functional weaknesses, related to the ERC's way of operating. Based on this analysis, we propose reforms aimed at improving the oversight capacity of ERCs in the era of big data science.ConclusionsWe believe the oversight mechanism could benefit from these reforms because they will help to overcome data-intensive research challenges and consequently benefit research at large.
- Published
- 2021
4. Stuck in translation: Stakeholder perspectives on impediments to responsible digital health
- Author
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Constantin Landers, Effy Vayena, Julia Amann, and Alessandro Blasimme
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digital health ,ethics ,regulation ,responsible innovation ,artificial intelligence ,machine learning ,Medicine ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Electronic computers. Computer science ,QA75.5-76.95 - Abstract
Spurred by recent advances in machine learning and electronic hardware, digital health promises to profoundly transform medicine. At the same time, however, it raises conspicuous ethical and regulatory issues. This has led to a growing number of calls for responsible digital health. Based on stakeholder engagement methods, this paper sets out to identify core impediments hindering responsible digital health in Switzerland. We developed a participatory research methodology to access stakeholders' fragmented knowledge of digital health, engaging 46 digital health stakeholders over a period of five months (December 2020–April 2021). We identified ineffective stakeholder collaboration, lack of ethical awareness among digital health innovators, and lack of relevant regulation as core impediments to responsible digital health. The stakeholders' accounts indicate that ethical concerns may considerably slow the pace of digital health innovation – implying that responsible innovation is a core catalyst for the progress of digital health overall.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Ethics review of big data research: What should stay and what should be reformed?
- Author
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Agata Ferretti, Marcello Ienca, Mark Sheehan, Alessandro Blasimme, Edward S. Dove, Bobbie Farsides, Phoebe Friesen, Jeff Kahn, Walter Karlen, Peter Kleist, S. Matthew Liao, Camille Nebeker, Gabrielle Samuel, Mahsa Shabani, Minerva Rivas Velarde, and Effy Vayena
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Big data ,Research ethics ,Ethics ,IRBs ,RECs ,Ethics review ,Medical philosophy. Medical ethics ,R723-726 - Abstract
Abstract Background Ethics review is the process of assessing the ethics of research involving humans. The Ethics Review Committee (ERC) is the key oversight mechanism designated to ensure ethics review. Whether or not this governance mechanism is still fit for purpose in the data-driven research context remains a debated issue among research ethics experts. Main text In this article, we seek to address this issue in a twofold manner. First, we review the strengths and weaknesses of ERCs in ensuring ethical oversight. Second, we map these strengths and weaknesses onto specific challenges raised by big data research. We distinguish two categories of potential weakness. The first category concerns persistent weaknesses, i.e., those which are not specific to big data research, but may be exacerbated by it. The second category concerns novel weaknesses, i.e., those which are created by and inherent to big data projects. Within this second category, we further distinguish between purview weaknesses related to the ERC’s scope (e.g., how big data projects may evade ERC review) and functional weaknesses, related to the ERC’s way of operating. Based on this analysis, we propose reforms aimed at improving the oversight capacity of ERCs in the era of big data science. Conclusions We believe the oversight mechanism could benefit from these reforms because they will help to overcome data-intensive research challenges and consequently benefit research at large.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Talking Ethics Early in Health Data Public Private Partnerships.
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Landers, Constantin, Ormond, Kelly E., Blasimme, Alessandro, Brall, Caroline, and Vayena, Effy
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PUBLIC-private sector cooperation ,INFORMATION sharing ,STAKEHOLDERS ,ETHICS ,HEALTH information systems - Abstract
Data access and data sharing are vital to advance medicine. A growing number of public private partnerships are set up to facilitate data access and sharing, as private and public actors possess highly complementary health data sets and treatment development resources. However, the priorities and incentives of public and private organizations are frequently in conflict. This has complicated partnerships and sparked public concerns around ethical issues such as trust, justice or privacy—in turn raising an important problem in business and data ethics: how can ethical theory inform the practice of public and private partners to mitigate misaligned incentives, and ensure that they can deliver societally beneficial innovation? In this paper, we report on the development of the Swiss Personalized Health Network's ethical guidelines for health data sharing in public private partnerships. We describe the process of identifying ethical issues and engaging core stakeholders to incorporate their practical reality on these issues. Our report highlights core ethical issues in health data public private partnerships and provides strategies for how to overcome these in the Swiss health data context. By agreeing on and formalizing ethical principles and practices at the beginning of a partnership, partners and society can benefit from a relationship built around a mutual commitment to ethical principles. We present this summary in the hope that it will contribute to the global data sharing dialogue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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7. Democratizing Health Research Through Data Cooperatives
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Blasimme, Alessandro, Vayena, Effy, and Hafen, Ernst
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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8. Optimizing the Aging Brain: The BEAD Study on the Ethics of Dementia Prevention
- Author
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M. Andreoletti, C. Lazzaroni, N. Petersen, S. Segawa, A. Leibing, S. Schicktanz, and A. Blasimme
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brain health ,prevention ,healthy aging ,Dementia ,ethics ,General Medicine - Abstract
Dementia has lately undergone a profound reconceptualization. Long conceived of as an unpreventable process of mental deterioration, current evidence shows that it can be prevented in at least one in three cases intervening on a specified set of factors. Issues of justice and equity loom large on the implementation of dementia prevention, from a global health perspective. Our project thus embraces emerging evidence about dementia risk factors and their uneven distribution nationally and globally by specifically focusing on the situated aspects of dementia prevention.The aim of the BEAD study (Optimizing the Aging Brain? Situating Ethical Aspects in Dementia Prevention) is to dissect the ethical and clinical assumptions of this novel understanding of dementia, and to analyze how such new discourse on dementia prevention plays out in three countries: Canada, Germany and Switzerland.This study adopts a multi-perspective, comparative, qualitative approach, combining stakeholder interviews with different kinds of focused ethnographies, elaborating on conceptual, ethical, and social aspects of what we would like to call the "new dementia".By situating the paradigmatic shifts in Alzheimer's and dementia research within current aging cultures and contemporary social policies, we aim to initiate a debate about the often implicit unresolved social, ethical, and political implications and preconditions of the medical understanding and handling of cognitive disorders., The Journal of Frailty & Aging, 12 (2), ISSN:2260-1341, ISSN:2273-4309
- Published
- 2023
9. Stuck in translation: Stakeholder perspectives on impediments to responsible digital health
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Landers, Constantin, Vayena, Effy, Amann, Julia, and Blasimme, Alessandro
- Subjects
Ethics ,Artificial intelligence ,Participatory research ,Machine learning ,Healthcare ,Biomedical Engineering ,Digital health ,Regulation ,Responsible innovation ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Health Informatics ,Computer Science Applications - Abstract
Spurred by recent advances in machine learning and electronic hardware, digital health promises to profoundly transform medicine. At the same time, however, it raises conspicuous ethical and regulatory issues. This has led to a growing number of calls for responsible digital health. Based on stakeholder engagement methods, this paper sets out to identify core impediments hindering responsible digital health in Switzerland. We developed a participatory research methodology to access stakeholders' fragmented knowledge of digital health, engaging 46 digital health stakeholders over a period of five months (December 2020–April 2021). We identified ineffective stakeholder collaboration, lack of ethical awareness among digital health innovators, and lack of relevant regulation as core impediments to responsible digital health. The stakeholders' accounts indicate that ethical concerns may considerably slow the pace of digital health innovation – implying that responsible innovation is a core catalyst for the progress of digital health overall., Frontiers in Digital Health, 5, ISSN:2673-253X
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Biomedical Big Data: New Models of Control Over Access, Use and Governance
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Vayena, Effy and Blasimme, Alessandro
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- 2017
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11. Physical frailty, sarcopenia, and the enablement of autonomy: philosophical issues in geriatric medicine
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Blasimme, Alessandro
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- 2017
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12. Big Data and Dementia: Charting the Route Ahead for Research, Ethics, and Policy
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Marcello Ienca, Effy Vayena, and Alessandro Blasimme
- Subjects
dementia ,big data ,ethics ,health policy ,Alzheimer’s disease ,real-world evidence ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Emerging trends in pervasive computing and medical informatics are creating the possibility for large-scale collection, sharing, aggregation and analysis of unprecedented volumes of data, a phenomenon commonly known as big data. In this contribution, we review the existing scientific literature on big data approaches to dementia, as well as commercially available mobile-based applications in this domain. Our analysis suggests that big data approaches to dementia research and care hold promise for improving current preventive and predictive models, casting light on the etiology of the disease, enabling earlier diagnosis, optimizing resource allocation, and delivering more tailored treatments to patients with specific disease trajectories. Such promissory outlook, however, has not materialized yet, and raises a number of technical, scientific, ethical, and regulatory challenges. This paper provides an assessment of these challenges and charts the route ahead for research, ethics, and policy.
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- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Mapping the translational science policy ‘valley of death’
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Meslin, Eric M, Blasimme, Alessandro, and Cambon-Thomsen, Anne
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- 2013
- Full Text
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14. The translational lag narrative in policy discourse in the United States and the European Union: a comparative study
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Aarden, Erik, Marelli, Luca, and Blasimme, Alessandro
- Subjects
PRODUCTIVITY ,INNOVATION ,REGIME ,Social Sciences ,GENOMIC MEDICINE ,SCIENCE ,CARE ,Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary ,MODEL ,AZ20-999 ,Social Sciences - Other Topics ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,HEALTH ,ETHICS - Abstract
Whilst basic science rapidly produces new insights into the biological determinants of human health and disease, clinical innovation is often said to lag behind, as it fails to rapidly turn such knowledge into new tools for innovative patient care. This view of biomedical innovation constitutes a ‘translational lag narrative’, which is widely present in current research policy. This paper presents a qualitative content analysis of a corpus of documents (n = 28) issued by key policy actors in the domain of clinical translation between 2000 and 2018 in the United States and the European Union. The aim is to reconstruct how policy discourse articulates the translational lag narrative, and to analyze how the latter relates to specific sociotechnical imaginaries of progress and of the role of policymaking in their realization. The article identifies key impediments to clinical translation and highlights salient differences in the sociotechnical imaginaries of translation in the US and the EU. In the US, policy discourse around translation is mostly driven by the perceived need to re-instate linearity in the transition from knowledge-production to clinical innovation. In the European context, instead, the driving imaginary of the policy discourse around clinical translation has to do with constructing a distinctly European model of economic growth centered around the idea of a knowledge-based economy, thereby connecting policy stimuli for translation with broader political imaginations. This analysis elucidates how publicly staged narratives about science and technology in the biomedical field simultaneously contain state-specific visions of progress and statecraft., Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 8 (1), ISSN:2662-9992
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- 2021
15. Mapping the translational science policy ‘valley of death’
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Eric M Meslin, Alessandro Blasimme, and Anne Cambon‐Thomsen
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Science policy ,Ethics ,Valley of death ,Stem cell research ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Translating the knowledge from biomedical science into clinical applications that help patients has been compared to crossing a valley of death because of the many issues that separate the bench from the bedside and threaten to stall progress. But translation is also inhibited by a science policy environment with its own impediments. Mapping these policy impediments give a more complete picture of the valley of death. Stem cell science is one example where success in moving from the bench to the bedside has confronted policy challenges generating difficulties as challenging as those facing scientists and clinicians. We highlight some of the characteristics and challenges of the science policy valley of death common to the U.S. and Europe, illustrate them with a recent example from stem cell science, and describe some promising strategies for traversing the valley.
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- 2013
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16. Biomedical Big Data: New Models of Control Over Access, Use and Governance
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Alessandro Blasimme and Effy Vayena
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Big Data ,Health (social science) ,Biomedical Research ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Data management ,Internet privacy ,Big data ,Datasets as Topic ,Medical law ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,Trust ,Data governance ,Ethics, Research ,03 medical and health sciences ,Symposium: Ethics and Epistemology of Big Data ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health Information Management ,Informed consent ,Control ,Humans ,Confidentiality ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,Ethics ,Governance ,Informed Consent ,business.industry ,Privacy ,Health Policy ,06 humanities and the arts ,Social Control, Formal ,Government ,Personal Autonomy ,060301 applied ethics ,Patient Participation ,business ,Personally identifiable information ,Autonomy - Abstract
Empirical evidence suggests that while people hold the capacity to control their data in high regard, they increasingly experience a loss of control over their data in the online world. The capacity to exert control over the generation and flow of personal information is a fundamental premise to important values such as autonomy, privacy, and trust. In healthcare and clinical research this capacity is generally achieved indirectly, by agreeing to specific conditions of informational exposure. Such conditions can be openly stated in informed consent documents or be implicit in the norms of confidentiality that govern the relationships of patients and healthcare professionals. However, with medicine becoming a data-intense enterprise, informed consent and medical confidentiality, as mechanisms of control, are put under pressure. In this paper we explore emerging models of informational control in data-intense healthcare and clinical research, which can compensate for the limitations of currently available instruments. More specifically, we discuss three approaches that hold promise in increasing individual control: the emergence of data portability rights as means to control data access, new mechanisms of informed consent as tools to control data use, and finally, new participatory governance schemes that allow individuals to control their data through direct involvement in data governance. We conclude by suggesting that, despite the impression that biomedical big data diminish individual control, the synergistic effect of new data management models can in fact improve it., Journal of Bioethical Inquiry, 14 (4), ISSN:1872-4353
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- 2017
17. Big data, precision medicine and private insurance: a delicate balancing act
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Alessandro Blasimme, Ine Van Hoyweghen, and Effy Vayena
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0303 health sciences ,Information Systems and Management ,Actuarial science ,business.industry ,Communication ,030305 genetics & heredity ,Big data ,Adverse selection ,lcsh:A ,Library and Information Sciences ,Precision medicine ,3. Good health ,Computer Science Applications ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Information asymmetry ,Big Data ,information asymmetry ,ethics ,insurance ,adverse selection ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Business ,Private insurance ,lcsh:General Works ,Information Systems - Abstract
In this paper, we discuss how access to health-related data by private insurers, other than affecting the interests of prospective policy-holders, can also influence their propensity to make personal data available for research purposes. We take the case of national precision medicine initiatives as an illustrative example of this possible tendency. Precision medicine pools together unprecedented amounts of genetic as well as phenotypic data. The possibility that private insurers could claim access to such rapidly accumulating biomedical Big Data or to health-related information derived from it would discourage people from enrolling in precision medicine studies. Should that be the case, the economic value of personal data for the insurance industry would end up affecting the public value of data as a scientific resource. In what follows we articulate three principles – trustworthiness, openness and evidence – to address this problem and tame its potentially harmful effects on the development of precision medicine and, more generally, on the advancement of medical science. ispartof: Big Data & Society vol:6 issue:1 pages:1-6 status: Published online
- Published
- 2019
18. Democratizing Health Research Through Data Cooperatives
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Ernst Hafen, Effy Vayena, and Alessandro Blasimme
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Direct control ,Big data ,Democratic governance ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,03 medical and health sciences ,Data cooperatives ,Data sharing ,Precision medicine ,Ethics ,Governance ,0302 clinical medicine ,History and Philosophy of Science ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Biomedicine ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,06 humanities and the arts ,Data science ,Data aggregator ,Philosophy ,Data access ,060301 applied ethics ,Business - Abstract
Massive amounts of data are collected and stored on a routine basis in virtually all domains of human activities. Such data are potentially useful to biomedicine. Yet, access to data for research purposes is hindered by the fact that different kinds of individual-patient data reside in disparate, unlinked silos. We propose that data cooperatives can promote much needed data aggregation and consequently accelerate research and its clinical translation. Data cooperatives enable direct control over personal data, as well as more democratic governance of data pools. This model can realize a specific kind of data economy whereby citizens and communities are empowered to steer data use according to their motivations, preferences, and concerns. Policy makers can promote this model by recognizing citizens’ rights to access and to obtain a copy of their own data, and by funding distributed data infrastructures piloting new data aggregation models., Philosophy & Technology, 31 (3), ISSN:2210-5433, ISSN:2210-5441
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- 2018
19. Big Data and Dementia: Charting the Route Ahead for Research, Ethics, and Policy
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Ienca, Marcello, Vayena, Effy, and Blasimme, Alessandro
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lcsh:R5-920 ,education ,health policy ,dementia ,big data ,ethics ,Alzheimer’s disease ,real-world evidence ,mild cognitive impairment ,m-health ,Perspective ,Medicine ,lcsh:Medicine (General) - Abstract
Emerging trends in pervasive computing and medical informatics are creating the possibility for large-scale collection, sharing, aggregation and analysis of unprecedented volumes of data, a phenomenon commonly known as big data. In this contribution, we review the existing scientific literature on big data approaches to dementia, as well as commercially available mobile-based applications in this domain. Our analysis suggests that big data approaches to dementia research and care hold promise for improving current preventive and predictive models, casting light on the etiology of the disease, enabling earlier diagnosis, optimizing resource allocation, and delivering more tailored treatments to patients with specific disease trajectories. Such promissory outlook, however, has not materialized yet, and raises a number of technical, scientific, ethical, and regulatory challenges. This paper provides an assessment of these challenges and charts the route ahead for research, ethics, and policy., Frontiers in Medicine, 5, ISSN:2296-858X
- Published
- 2017
20. Genes wide open: Data sharing and the social gradient of genomic privacy.
- Author
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Haeusermann, Tobias, Fadda, Marta, Blasimme, Alessandro, Tzovaras, Bastian Greshake, and Vayena, Effy
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INFORMATION sharing ,GENETIC privacy ,GENOMICS ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESEARCH ethics ,SOCIAL stigma ,SOCIAL status - Abstract
This study reports on 13 semistructured in-depth interviews to qualitatively explore the experiences of individuals who publicly shared their direct-to-consumer genetic testing results on the platform openSNP. In particular, we focused on interviewees' understanding of privacy. Participants reported that the likelihood and the magnitude of privacy harms depend on gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, the stigma associated with certain clinical conditions, the existence of adequate legislation, and the nature of national health care systems. Some participants expressed the view that those who enjoy higher socioeconomic status or are better protected by their country's legislation have a responsibility to share their genetic data. Our study shows that people who share their genetic data publicly online—far from being insensitive to privacy risks—have a complex understanding of the social, relational, and contextual nature of genetic privacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Becoming partners, retaining autonomy: ethical considerations on the development of precision medicine.
- Author
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Blasimme, Alessandro and Vayena, Effy
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INDIVIDUALIZED medicine ,MEDICAL ethics ,MEDICAL research ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,PERFECTIONISM (Personality trait) - Abstract
Precision medicine promises to develop diagnoses and treatments that take individual variability into account. According to most specialists, turning this promise into reality will require adapting the established framework of clinical research ethics, and paying more attention to participants' attitudes towards sharing genotypic, phenotypic, lifestyle data and health records, and ultimately to their desire to be engaged as active partners in medical research. Notions such as participation, engagement and partnership have been introduced in bioethics debates concerning genetics and large-scale biobanking to broaden the focus of discussion beyond individual choice and individuals' moral interests. The uptake of those concepts in precision medicine is to be welcomed. However, as data and medical information from research participants in precision medicine cohorts will be collected on an individual basis, translating a participatory approach in this emerging area may prove cumbersome. Therefore, drawing on Joseph Raz's perfectionism, we propose a principle of respect for autonomous agents that, we reckon, can address many of the concerns driving recent scholarship on partnership and public participation, while avoiding some of the limitations these concept have in the context of precision medicine. Our approach offers a normative clarification to how becoming partners in precision is compatible with retaining autonomy. Realigning the value of autonomy with ideals of direct engagement, we show, can provide adequate normative orientation to precision medicine; it can do justice to the idea of moral pluralism by stressing the value of moral self-determination: and, finally, it can reconcile the notion of autonomy with other more communitarian values such as participation and solidarity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
22. Genome Editing and Dialogic Responsibility: “What's in a Name?”.
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Blasimme, Alessandro, Anegon, Ignacio, Concordet, Jean-Paul, De Vos, John, Dubart-Kupperschmitt, Anne, Fellous, Marc, Fouchet, Pierre, Frydman, Nelly, Giovannangeli, Carine, Jouannet, Pierre, Serre, Jean-Loius, Steffann, Julie, Rial-Sebbag, Emmanuelle, Thomsen, Mogens, and Cambon-Thomsen, Anne
- Subjects
- *
GENETIC engineering & ethics , *HUMAN genome , *BIOETHICS , *MASS media , *METAPHOR , *PUBLIC opinion , *RESPONSIBILITY , *TERMS & phrases , *GENOMICS , *HEALTH literacy , *ETHICS - Abstract
The article focuses on the challenges in finding a suitable expression in French to refer to CRISPR-Cas9, referencing the article ""Editing" genes: A case study about how language matters in bioethics" by M. O'Keefe and colleagues within the issue. Topics mentioned include how adopting the English wording would oppose a national language being a civic asset, the principle of dialogic responsibility, and the use of the expression targeted genome engineering to refer to CRISPR-Cas9 in general.
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- 2015
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23. Reprogramming Potentiality: The Co-Production of Stem Cell Policy and Democracy.
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Blasimme, Alessandro, Schmietow, Bettina, and Testa, Giuseppe
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- *
EMBRYOLOGY & ethics , *STEM cell research ethics , *ETHICS , *PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
The authors discuss the article "The argument from potentiality in the embryo protection debate: Finally 'depotentialized'?" by M. S. Stier and B. Schoene-Seifert from the volume 13 number 1, 2013 issue, with particular focus on the ethics and regulation of human embryonic stem cell (hESC) research. They argue that scientific evidence on cellular reprogramming necessitates changes to hESC research policies based on the potentiality argument (PA) of the moral status of embryos.
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- 2013
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24. Disclosing Results to Genomic Research Participants: Differences That Matter.
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Blasimme, Alessandro, Soulier, Alexandra, Julia, Sophie, Leonard, Samantha, and Cambon-Thomsen, Anne
- Subjects
- *
GENETIC research , *GENETIC research & ethics , *DISCLOSURE , *FAMILIES , *HUMAN research subjects , *ETHICS - Abstract
The article focuses on the benefits and disadvantages that genetic research participants and the families of genetic research participants could find from having the results of advanced genetic testing disclosed to them. In the article the authors offer their opinions on the moral and issues that are raised with the disclosure of genetic testing results and on several genetic testing programs.
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- 2012
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25. Becoming partners, retaining autonomy: ethical considerations on the development of precision medicine
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Effy Vayena, Alessandro Blasimme, University of Zurich, Blasimme, Alessandro, Health Ethics and Policy Lab [Zurich, Suisse], Universität Zürich [Zürich] = University of Zurich (UZH), Epidémiologie et analyses en santé publique : risques, maladies chroniques et handicaps (LEASP), Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), The work of AB has been partially supported by EUCelLEX EU-FP7 Program, Grant Agreement No. 601806., Bodescot, Myriam, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), and Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées
- Subjects
Value (ethics) ,Health (social science) ,Biomedical Research ,Databases, Factual ,Social Values ,Debate ,Medical Records ,0302 clinical medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Sociology ,Bioethical Issues ,Autonomy ,media_common ,Biological Specimen Banks ,Social Responsibility ,Health Policy ,Precision medicine ,Participation ,06 humanities and the arts ,3. Good health ,2910 Issues, Ethics and Legal Aspects ,Pluralism (political theory) ,Public participation ,[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/Psychology ,[SCCO.PSYC] Cognitive science/Psychology ,Engineering ethics ,Ethical Theory ,3306 Health (social science) ,Social psychology ,Attitude to Health ,media_common.quotation_subject ,610 Medicine & health ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,Morals ,Ethics, Research ,Health(social science) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Humans ,Justice (ethics) ,Ethics ,Community Participation ,Bioethics ,10060 Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Prevention Institute (EBPI) ,[SDV.ETH] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ethics ,Personalized medicine ,2719 Health Policy ,[SDV.ETH]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ethics ,Philosophy ,Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Philosophy of medicine ,[SDV.SPEE] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,Personal Autonomy ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,060301 applied ethics ,Patient Participation - Abstract
Precision medicine promises to develop diagnoses and treatments that take individual variability into account. According to most specialists, turning this promise into reality will require adapting the established framework of clinical research ethics, and paying more attention to participants’ attitudes towards sharing genotypic, phenotypic, lifestyle data and health records, and ultimately to their desire to be engaged as active partners in medical research.Notions such as participation, engagement and partnership have been introduced in bioethics debates concerning genetics and large-scale biobanking to broaden the focus of discussion beyond individual choice and individuals’ moral interests. The uptake of those concepts in precision medicine is to be welcomed. However, as data and medical information from research participants in precision medicine cohorts will be collected on an individual basis, translating a participatory approach in this emerging area may prove cumbersome. Therefore, drawing on Joseph Raz’s perfectionism, we propose a principle of respect for autonomous agents that, we reckon, can address many of the concerns driving recent scholarship on partnership and public participation, while avoiding some of the limitations these concept have in the context of precision medicine. Our approach offers a normative clarification to how becoming partners in precision is compatible with retaining autonomy.Realigning the value of autonomy with ideals of direct engagement, we show, can provide adequate normative orientation to precision medicine; it can do justice to the idea of moral pluralism by stressing the value of moral self-determination: and, finally, it can reconcile the notion of autonomy with other more communitarian values such as participation and solidarity.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Becoming partners, retaining autonomy: ethical considerations on the development of precision medicine
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Blasimme, Alessandro and Vayena, Effy
- Subjects
Ethics ,Precision medicine ,Participation ,Autonomy ,Personalized medicine ,3. Good health - Abstract
Precision medicine promises to develop diagnoses and treatments that take individual variability into account. According to most specialists, turning this promise into reality will require adapting the established framework of clinical research ethics, and paying more attention to participants’ attitudes towards sharing genotypic, phenotypic, lifestyle data and health records, and ultimately to their desire to be engaged as active partners in medical research. Notions such as participation, engagement and partnership have been introduced in bioethics debates concerning genetics and large-scale biobanking to broaden the focus of discussion beyond individual choice and individuals’ moral interests. The uptake of those concepts in precision medicine is to be welcomed. However, as data and medical information from research participants in precision medicine cohorts will be collected on an individual basis, translating a participatory approach in this emerging area may prove cumbersome. Therefore, drawing on Joseph Raz’s perfectionism, we propose a principle of respect for autonomous agents that, we reckon, can address many of the concerns driving recent scholarship on partnership and public participation, while avoiding some of the limitations these concept have in the context of precision medicine. Our approach offers a normative clarification to how becoming partners in precision is compatible with retaining autonomy. Realigning the value of autonomy with ideals of direct engagement, we show, can provide adequate normative orientation to precision medicine; it can do justice to the idea of moral pluralism by stressing the value of moral self-determination: and, finally, it can reconcile the notion of autonomy with other more communitarian values such as participation and solidarity., BMC Medical Ethics, 17 (1), ISSN:1472-6939
27. Mapping the translational science policy 'valley of death'
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Meslin, Eric M., Blasimme, Alessandro, and Cambon-Thomsen, Anne
- Subjects
Ethics ,Valley of death ,Stem cell research ,Science policy ,3. Good health - Abstract
Translating the knowledge from biomedical science into clinical applications that help patients has been compared to crossing a valley of death because of the many issues that separate the bench from the bedside and threaten to stall progress. But translation is also inhibited by a science policy environment with its own impediments. Mapping these policy impediments give a more complete picture of the valley of death. Stem cell science is one example where success in moving from the bench to the bedside has confronted policy challenges generating difficulties as challenging as those facing scientists and clinicians. We highlight some of the characteristics and challenges of the science policy valley of death common to the U.S. and Europe, illustrate them with a recent example from stem cell science, and describe some promising strategies for traversing the valley., Clinical and Translational Medicine, 2, ISSN:2001-1326
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