446 results on '"Blasimme A"'
Search Results
52. Accelerated drug approval: Meeting the ethical yardstick
- Author
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Andreoletti, Mattia, primary and Blasimme, Alessandro, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
53. From lab to society: Fostering clinical translation of molecular systems engineering.
- Author
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da Silva, Renan Gonçalves Leonel and Blasimme, Alessandro
- Subjects
- *
SYSTEMS engineering , *SCIENTIFIC communication , *TRUST , *BIOMEDICAL engineering , *CLINICAL medicine - Abstract
Over the last decade, bioengineering has seen a sustained growth in scientific publications, patents, and clinical trials. As the field attempts to bridge the gap between discovery and clinical application, a broader societal dialogue is needed to build public trust and address potential ethical, societal, and regulatory challenges. In this essay, we discuss societal aspects linked to the clinical use of biomedical engineering approaches and technologies, with a specific focus on molecular systems engineering. Drawing on data from interviews with 24 scientists, we identified four key aspects for fostering societal support for translational efforts in this domain: (1) effective science communication and internal awareness; (2) open societal dialogue; (3) fair and equitable access to new technologies; and (4) adequate science and technology policies. We conclude that molecular systems engineering would benefit from anticipating future challenges with the view of building a robust bond of trust with lay publics, regulators, and society at large. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
54. From Research to Policy: Unveiling Dementia Prevention Efforts in Switzerland.
- Author
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Mattia, Andreoletti and Blasimme, Alessandro
- Abstract
Recent research has challenged the notion that dementia is an inevitable outcome of age-related cognitive decline, highlighting the possibility of preventing or delaying onset by addressing specific risk factors. This paradigm shift suggests that prevention through lifestyle modifications and early interventions is possible, potentially averting millions of cases worldwide. This study explores the translation of scientific evidence on dementia prevention into public health policy in Switzerland. Combining the analysis of official policy documents and qualitative interviews with stakeholders, the study explores potential barriers and challenges to implementing preventive intervenions or programs, as well as opportunities for improvement. Results indicate a significant gap in incorporating emerging scientific evidence on dementia prevention into health policies and disseminating information to the public in Switzerland. This study underscores the need for a collaborative and coordinated approach to address these barriers and effectively translate scientific findings into preventive policies and campaigns. These insights can inform policy and targeted programs in Switzerland both at the federal and the cantonal level, eventually serving as a model for other countries seeking to translate evidence-based dementia prevention strategies into public health policies. By bridging the gap between research and policy, significant progress can be made in preventing or delaying the onset of dementia, providing significant benefits to individuals, families, and society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
55. Democratizing Health Research Through Data Cooperatives
- Author
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Blasimme, Alessandro, Vayena, Effy, and Hafen, Ernst
- Subjects
Medical research -- Ethical aspects -- Management ,Company business management ,Library and information science ,Science and technology ,Social sciences - 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., Author(s): Alessandro Blasimme [sup.1] , Effy Vayena [sup.1] , Ernst Hafen [sup.2] Author Affiliations: (Aff1) 0000 0001 2156 2780, grid.5801.c, Department of Health Sciences and Technology, ETH Zurich, , Zurich, [...]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
56. Talking Ethics Early in Health Data Public Private Partnerships
- Author
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Landers, Constantin, primary, Ormond, Kelly E., additional, Blasimme, Alessandro, additional, Brall, Caroline, additional, and Vayena, Effy, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
57. Beyond high hopes: A scoping review of the 2019-2021 scientific discourse on machine learning in medical imaging
- Author
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Nittas, Vasileios; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6685-8275, Daniore, Paola; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3319-1125, Landers, Constantin, Gille, Felix; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2847-4633, Amann, Julia; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2155-5286, Hubbs, Shannon, Puhan, Milo Alan, Vayena, Effy; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1303-5467, Blasimme, Alessandro; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5908-2002, Nittas, Vasileios; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6685-8275, Daniore, Paola; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3319-1125, Landers, Constantin, Gille, Felix; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2847-4633, Amann, Julia; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2155-5286, Hubbs, Shannon, Puhan, Milo Alan, Vayena, Effy; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1303-5467, and Blasimme, Alessandro; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5908-2002
- Abstract
Machine learning has become a key driver of the digital health revolution. That comes with a fair share of high hopes and hype. We conducted a scoping review on machine learning in medical imaging, providing a comprehensive outlook of the field's potential, limitations, and future directions. Most reported strengths and promises included: improved (a) analytic power, (b) efficiency (c) decision making, and (d) equity. Most reported challenges included: (a) structural barriers and imaging heterogeneity, (b) scarcity of well-annotated, representative and interconnected imaging datasets (c) validity and performance limitations, including bias and equity issues, and (d) the still missing clinical integration. The boundaries between strengths and challenges, with cross-cutting ethical and regulatory implications, remain blurred. The literature emphasizes explainability and trustworthiness, with a largely missing discussion about the specific technical and regulatory challenges surrounding these concepts. Future trends are expected to shift towards multi-source models, combining imaging with an array of other data, in a more open access, and explainable manner.
- Published
- 2023
58. Big Data, precision medicine and private insurance: A delicate balancing act
- Author
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Alessandro Blasimme, Effy Vayena, and Ine Van Hoyweghen
- Subjects
General Works - 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.
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- 2019
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59. Stuck in translation: Stakeholder perspectives on impediments to responsible digital health
- Author
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Landers, Constantin, primary, Vayena, Effy, additional, Amann, Julia, additional, and Blasimme, Alessandro, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
60. Beyond high hopes: A scoping review of the 2019–2021 scientific discourse on machine learning in medical imaging
- Author
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Nittas, Vasileios, primary, Daniore, Paola, additional, Landers, Constantin, additional, Gille, Felix, additional, Amann, Julia, additional, Hubbs, Shannon, additional, Puhan, Milo Alan, additional, Vayena, Effy, additional, and Blasimme, Alessandro, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
61. Expectations and attitudes towards medical artificial intelligence: A qualitative study in the field of stroke
- Author
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Amann, Julia, primary, Vayena, Effy, additional, Ormond, Kelly E., additional, Frey, Dietmar, additional, Madai, Vince I., additional, and Blasimme, Alessandro, additional
- Published
- 2023
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62. The ethics of geriatric care
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Alessandro Blasimme
- Published
- 2022
63. Assessing the Governance of Digital Contact Tracing in Response to COVID-19: Results of a Multi-National Study
- Author
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Brian Hutler, Alessandro Blasimme, Rachel Gur-Arie, Joseph Ali, Anne Barnhill, Amelia Hood, Jeffrey Kahn, Nancy L. Perkins, Alan Regenberg, and Effy Vayena
- Subjects
Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Health Policy ,General Medicine - Abstract
This paper describes the results of a multi-country survey of governance approaches for the use of digital contact tracing (DCT) in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. We argue that the countries in our survey represent two distinct models of DCT governance, both of which are flawed. The “data protection model” emphasizes privacy protections at the expense of public health benefit, while the “emergency response model” sacrifices transparency and accountability, prompting concerns about excessive governance surveillance. The ethical and effective use of DCT in the future requires a new governance approach that is better suited to this novel use of mobile phone data to promote public health.”
- Published
- 2022
64. 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
- Subjects
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
65. From lab to society: Fostering clinical translation of molecular systems engineering
- Author
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Gonçalves Leonel da Silva, Renan and Blasimme, Alessandro
- Subjects
molecular systems engineering ,science policy ,biomedical engineering ,engagement ,society ,trust - Abstract
Over the last decade, bioengineering has seen a sustained growth in scientific publications, patents, and clinical trials. As the field attempts to bridge the gap between discovery and clinical application, a broader societal dialog is needed to build public trust and address potential ethical, societal, and regulatory challenges. In this essay, we discuss societal aspects linked to the clinical use of biomedical engineering approaches and technologies, with a specific focus on molecular systems engineering. Drawing on data from interviews with 24 scientists, we identified four key aspects for fostering societal support for translational efforts in this domain: (1) effective science communication and internal awareness; (2) open societal dialogue; (3) fair and equitable access to new technologies; and (4) adequate science and technology policies. We conclude that molecular systems engineering would benefit from anticipating future challenges with the view of building a robust bond of trust with lay publics, regulators, and society at large., Bioengineering & Translational Medicine, ISSN:2380-6761
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
66. Unlock Digital Health Promotion in LMICs to Benefit the Youth
- Author
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Agata Ferretti, Effy Vayena, and Alessandro Blasimme
- Subjects
History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2023
67. Biomedical Big Data: New Models of Control Over Access, Use and Governance
- Author
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Vayena, Effy and Blasimme, Alessandro
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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68. Physical frailty, sarcopenia, and the enablement of autonomy: philosophical issues in geriatric medicine
- Author
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Blasimme, Alessandro
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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69. 5 MIND’S FRAILTY Elements of a 'Geriatric Logic' in the Clinical Discourse about Dementia Prevention
- Author
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Alessandro Blasimme
- Published
- 2022
70. Machine learning in medicine: Addressing ethical challenges.
- Author
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Effy Vayena, Alessandro Blasimme, and I Glenn Cohen
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Effy Vayena and colleagues argue that machine learning in medicine must offer data protection, algorithmic transparency, and accountability to earn the trust of patients and clinicians.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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71. Big Data and Dementia: Charting the Route Ahead for Research, Ethics, and Policy
- Author
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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.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
72. Digital health: meeting the ethical and policy challenges
- Author
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Effy Vayena, Tobias Haeusermann, Afua Adjekum, and Alessandro Blasimme
- Subjects
digital health ,personalised health ,digital ethics ,data governance ,Medicine - Abstract
Digital health encompasses a wide range of novel digital technologies related to health and medicine. Such technologies rely on recent advances in the collection and analysis of ever increasing amounts of data from both patients and healthy citizens. Along with new opportunities, however, come new ethical and policy challenges. These range from the need to adapt current evidence-based standards, to issues of privacy, oversight, accountability and public trust as well as national and international data governance and management. This review illustrates key issues and challenges facing the rapidly unfolding digital health paradigm and reflects on the impact of big data in medical research and clinical practice both internationally and in Switzerland. It concludes by emphasising five conditions that will be crucial to fulfil in order to foster innovation and fair benefit sharing in digital health.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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73. A Systemic Approach to the Oversight of Machine Learning Clinical Translation
- Author
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Effy Vayena and Alessandro Blasimme
- Subjects
Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Health Policy - Published
- 2022
74. Familial Alzheimer's disease sustained by presenilin 2 mutations: Systematic review of literature and genotype–phenotype correlation
- Author
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Canevelli, Marco, Piscopo, Paola, Talarico, Giuseppina, Vanacore, Nicola, Blasimme, Alessandro, Crestini, Alessio, Tosto, Giuseppe, Troili, Fernanda, Lenzi, Gian Luigi, Confaloni, Annamaria, and Bruno, Giuseppe
- Published
- 2014
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75. Cancer Biomarkers: Ethics, Economics and Society
- Author
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Cairns, John, additional, Tranvåg, Eirik, additional, Norheim, Ole Frithjof, additional, Seo, Mikyung Kelly, additional, Wik, Elisabeth, additional, Engen, Caroline, additional, Blasimme, Alessandro, additional, and Fleck, Leonard M., additional
- Published
- 2017
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76. Open sharing of genomic data: Who does it and why?
- Author
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Tobias Haeusermann, Bastian Greshake, Alessandro Blasimme, Darja Irdam, Martin Richards, and Effy Vayena
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
We explored the characteristics and motivations of people who, having obtained their genetic or genomic data from Direct-To-Consumer genetic testing (DTC-GT) companies, voluntarily decide to share them on the publicly accessible web platform openSNP. The study is the first attempt to describe open data sharing activities undertaken by individuals without institutional oversight. In the paper we provide a detailed overview of the distribution of the demographic characteristics and motivations of people engaged in genetic or genomic open data sharing. The geographical distribution of the respondents showed the USA as dominant. There was no significant gender divide, the age distribution was broad, educational background varied and respondents with and without children were equally represented. Health, even though prominent, was not the respondents' primary or only motivation to be tested. As to their motivations to openly share their data, 86.05% indicated wanting to learn about themselves as relevant, followed by contributing to the advancement of medical research (80.30%), improving the predictability of genetic testing (76.02%) and considering it fun to explore genotype and phenotype data (75.51%). Whereas most respondents were well aware of the privacy risks of their involvement in open genetic data sharing and considered the possibility of direct, personal repercussions troubling, they estimated the risk of this happening to be negligible. Our findings highlight the diversity of DTC-GT consumers who decide to openly share their data. Instead of focusing exclusively on health-related aspects of genetic testing and data sharing, our study emphasizes the importance of taking into account benefits and risks that stretch beyond the health spectrum. Our results thus lend further support to the call for a broader and multi-faceted conceptualization of genomic utility.
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- 2017
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77. What mechanisms can’t do: Explanatory frameworks and the function of the p53 gene in molecular oncology
- Author
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Blasimme, Alessandro, Maugeri, Paolo, and Germain, Pierre-Luc
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- 2013
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78. Shifting the Focus of Dementia Prevention: Ethical Considerations
- Author
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Alessandro Blasimme, Matteo Cesari, and Marco Canevelli
- Subjects
Focus (computing) ,Psychotherapist ,General Neuroscience ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Dementia ,Disease ,Clinical manifestation ,medicine.disease ,Psychology - Abstract
Anticipating the diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease (AD) and other dementias depends on seeing such conditions as progressive neuropathological phenomena originating before the clinical manifestation...
- Published
- 2021
79. Operational definition of Active and Healthy Ageing (AHA): A conceptual framework
- Author
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Bousquet, Jean, Kuh, D., Bewick, M., Standberg, T., Farrell, J., Pengelly, R., Joel, M. E., Rodriguez Mañas, L., Mercier, J., Bringer, J., Camuzat, T., Bourret, R., Bedbrook, A., Kowalski, M. L., Samolinski, B., Bonini, S., Brayne, C., Michel, J. P., Venne, J., Viriot-Durandal, P., Alonso, J., Avignon, A., Ben-Shlomo, Y., Bousquet, P. J., Combe, B., Cooper, R., Hardy, R., Iaccarino, G., Keil, T., Kesse-Guyot, E., Momas, I., Ritchie, K., Robine, J. M., Thijs, C., Tischer, C., Vellas, B., Zaidi, A., Alonso, F., Andersen Ranberg, K., Andreeva, V., Ankri, J., Arnavielhe, S., Arshad, H., Augé, P., Berr, C., Bertone, P., Blain, H., Blasimme, A., Buijs, G. J., Caimmi, D., Carriazo, A., Cesario, A., Coletta, J., Cosco, T., Criton, M., Cuisinier, F., Demoly, P., Fernandez-Nocelo, S., Fougère, B., Garcia-Aymerich, J., Goldberg, M., Guldemond, N., Gutter, Z., Harman, D., Hendry, A., Heve, D., Illario, M., Jeande, C., Krauss-Etschmann, S., Krys, O., Kula, D., Laune, D., Lehmann, S., Maier, D., Malva, J., Matignon, P., Melen, E., Mercier, G., Moda, G., Nizinkska, A., Nogues, M., O’Neill, M., Pelissier, J. Y., Poethig, D., Porta, D., Postma, D., Puisieux, F., Richards, M., Robalo-Cordeiro, C., Romano, V., Roubille, F., Schulz, H., Scott, A., Senesse, P., Slagter, S., Smit, H. A., Somekh, D., Stafford, M., Suanzes, J., Todo-Bom, A., Touchon, J., Traver-Salcedo, V., Van Beurden, M., Varraso, R., Vergara, I., Villalba-Mora, E., Wilson, N., Wouters, E., and Zins, M.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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80. A Systemic Approach to the Oversight of Machine Learning Clinical Translation
- Author
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Vayena, Effy, primary and Blasimme, Alessandro, additional
- Published
- 2022
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81. Humanised models of cancer in molecular medicine: the experimental control of disanalogy
- Author
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Maugeri, Paolo and Blasimme, Alessandro
- Published
- 2011
82. Future-proofing biobanks’ governance
- Author
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Alessandro Blasimme, Felix Gille, and Effy Vayena
- Subjects
Knowledge management ,Quality management ,Databases, Factual ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,Communication ,Health Policy ,State of affairs ,Certification ,Review Article ,Biobank ,Trustworthiness ,Medical research ,Informed consent ,Accountability ,Genetics ,Government Regulation ,Humans ,business ,Genetics (clinical) ,Confidentiality ,Biological Specimen Banks - Abstract
Good biobank governance implies—at a minimum—transparency and accountability and the implementation of oversight mechanisms. While the biobanking community is in general committed to such principles, little is known about precisely which governance strategies biobanks adopt to meet those objectives. We conducted an exploratory analysis of governance mechanisms adopted by research biobanks, including genetic biobanks, located in Europe and Canada. We reviewed information available on the websites of 69 biobanks, and directly contacted them for additional information. Our study identified six types of commonly adopted governance strategies: communication, compliance, expert advice, external review, internal procedures, and partnerships. Each strategy is implemented through different mechanisms including, independent ethics assessment, informed consent processes, quality management, data access control, legal compliance, standard operating procedures and external certification. Such mechanisms rely on a wide range of bodies, committees and actors from both within and outside the biobanks themselves. We found that most biobanks aim to be transparent about their governance mechanisms, but could do more to provide more complete and detailed information about them. In particular, the retrievable information, while showing efforts to ensure biobanks operate in a legitimate way, does not specify in sufficient detail how governance mechanisms support accountability, nor how they ensure oversight of research operations. This state of affairs can potentially undermine biobanks’ trustworthiness to stakeholders and the public in a long-term perspective. Given the ever-increasing reliance of biomedical research on large biological repositories and their associated databases, we recommend that biobanks increase their efforts to future-proof their governance., European Journal of Human Genetics, 28, ISSN:1476-5438, ISSN:1018-4813
- Published
- 2020
83. A New Web-Based Big Data Analytics for Dynamic Public Opinion Mapping in Digital Networks on Contested Biotechnology Fields
- Author
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Annette Leibing, Mathieu Jacomy, Virginie Tournay, Alessandro Blasimme, Andra Stefania Necula, Centre de recherches politiques de Sciences Po (CEVIPOF), Sciences Po (Sciences Po)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Médialab (Sciences Po) (Médialab), Sciences Po (Sciences Po), Université de Montréal (UdeM), Department of Humanities, Social and Political Sciences [ETH Zürich] (D-GESS), Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule - Swiss Federal Institute of Technology [Zürich] (ETH Zürich), and Centre de recherches politiques de Sciences Po (Sciences Po, CNRS) (CEVIPOF)
- Subjects
Data Analysis ,0301 basic medicine ,Network science ,Big data ,Critical technology governance ,Public opinion ,Biochemistry ,Biological Science Disciplines ,Digital media ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Political science ,Genetics ,Data Mining ,Humans ,Web application ,Molecular Biology ,Internet ,[SHS.SOCIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Sociology ,[SHS.STAT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Methods and statistics ,Eurobarometer ,business.industry ,Stem Cells ,[SHS.SCIPO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Political science ,Biotechnology ,030104 developmental biology ,Analytics ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Molecular Medicine ,Public sphere ,business - Abstract
The expression “public opinion” has long been part of common parlance. However, its value as a scientific measure has been the topic of abundant academic debates over the past several decades. Such debates have produced more variety and contestations rather than consensus on the very definition of public opinion, let alone on how to measure it. This study reports on the usefulness of web-based big data digital network analytics in deciphering the distributed meanings and sense making related to controversial biotechnology applications. Using stem cell therapies as a case study, we argue that such digital network analysis can complement the traditional opinion polls while avoiding the sampling bias that is typical of opinion polls. Although the polls cannot account for the opinion dynamics, combining them with web-based big data analysis can shed light on three dimensions of public opinion essential for sense making: counts or volume of opinion data, content, and movement of opinions. This approach is particularly promising in the case of ongoing scientific controversies that increasingly overflow into the public sphere morphing into public political debates. In particular, our study focuses as a case study on public controversies over the clinical provision of stem cell therapies. Using web entities specifically addressing stem cell issues, including their dynamic aggregation, the internal architecture of the web corpus we report in this study brings the third dimension of public opinion (movement) into sharper focus. Notably, the corpus of stem cell networks through web connectivity presents hot spots of distributed meaning. Large-scale surveys conducted on these issues, such as the Eurobarometer of Biotechnology, reveal that European citizens only accept research on stem cells if they are highly regulated, while the stem cell digital network analysis presented in this study suggests that distributed meaning is promise centeredness. Although major scientific journals and companies tend to structure public opinion networks, our finding of promise centeredness as a key ingredient of distributed meaning and sense making is consistent with therapeutic tourism that remains as an important facet of the stem cell community despite the lack of material standards. This new approach to digital network analysis has crosscutting corollaries for rethinking the notion of public opinion, be it in electoral preferences or as we discuss in this study, for new ways to measure, monitor, and democratically govern emerging technologies.
- Published
- 2020
84. Regenerative Medicine, Unproven Therapies and the Framing of Clinical Risk
- Author
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Alessandro Blasimme
- Published
- 2022
85. Machine Learning in Paediatrics and the Childs's Right to An Open Future
- Author
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Alessandro Blasimme
- Subjects
History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
86. The sarcopenia and physical frailty in older people: multi-component treatment strategies (SPRINTT) project: description and feasibility of a nutrition intervention in community-dwelling older Europeans
- Author
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Jyvakorpi S. K., Ramel A., Strandberg T. E., Piotrowicz K., Blaszczyk-Bebenek E., Urtamo A., Rempe H. M., Geirsdottir O., Vagnerova T., Billot M., Larreur A., Savera G., Soriano G., Picauron C., Tagliaferri S., Sanchez-Puelles C., Cadenas V. S., Perl A., Tirrel L., Ohman H., Weling-Scheepers C., Ambrosi S., Costantini A., Pavelkova K., Klimkova M., Freiberger E., Jonsson P. V., Marzetti E., Pitkala K. H., Landi F., Calvani R., Bernabei R., Boni C., Brandi V., Broccatelli M., Celesti C., Cicchetti A., Collamati A., Coretti S., D'Angelo E., D'Elia M., Landi G., Lorenzi M., Mariotti L., Martone A. M., Ortolani E., Pafundi T., Picca A., Ruggeri M., Salini S., Tosato M., Vetrano D. L., Lattanzio F., Baldoni R., Bernabei S., Bonfigli A. R., Bustacchini S., Carrieri B., Cassetta L., Cherubini A., Cucchi M., Cucchieri G., Costantini A. R., Dell'Aquila G., Espinosa E., Fedecostante M., Fraternali R., Galeazzi R., Mengarelli A., Piomboni S., Posacki E., Severini E., Tregambe T., Trotta F., Maggio M., Lauretani F., Butto V., Fisichella A., Guareschi C., Longobucco Y., Di Bari M., Rodriguez-Manas L., Alamo S., Bouzon C. A., Gonzales Turin J., Zafra O. L. L., Picazo A. L., Sepulveda L. P., SanchezSanchez J. L., Puelles C. S., Aragones M. V., CruzJentoft A. J., Santos J. A., Alvarez-Nebreda L., JimenezJimenez N. F., Nozal J. M. -D., Montero-Errasquin B., Moreno B. P. B. P., Roldan-Plaza C., Vicente A. R. -D., Sanchez-Cadenas V., Sanchez-Castellano C., Sanchez-Garcia E., Vaquero-Pinto M. N., Topinkova E., Bautzka L., Blechova K., Gueye T., Juklickova I., Klbikova T., Krenkova J. J., Madlova P., Mejstrikova H., Melcova R., Michalkova H., Ryznarova I., Drastichova I., Hasalikova E., Hucko R., Jakub S., Janacova M., Kilmkova M., Parizkova M., Redrova M., Ruskova P. P., Sieber C. C., Auerswald T., Engel C., Franke A., Freibergen E., Freiheit U., Gotthardt S., Kampe K., Kob R., Kokott C., Kraska C., Meyer C., Reith V., Rempe H., Schoene D., Sieber G., Zielinski K., Anker S. D., Ebner N., Grutz R., von Haehling S., Schols A. M. W. J., Gosker H., Huysmans S., Quaaden S., Schols J. M., Smeets N., Stevens P., van de Bool C., Weling C., Strandberg T., Jyvakorpi S., Hallikas K., Herranen M., Huusko T., Hytonen L., Ikonen K., Karppi-Sjoblom A., Karvinen K., Kayhty M., Kindsted T., Landstrom E., Leirimaa S., Pitkala K., Punkka A., Saavalainen A. -M., Salo T., Sepa M., Sohlberg K., Vaatamoinen E., Venalainen S., Vanhanen H., Vellas B., Van Kan G. A., Biville V., Brigitte L., Cervera C., Cesari M., Champarnaud M., Cluzan C., Croizet M., Dardenne S., Dorard M., Dupuy C., Durand E., Faisant C., Fougere B., Girard P., Guyonnet S., Hoogendijk E., Mauroux R., Milhet A., Montel S., Ousset P. -J., Teguo M. T., Teysseyre B., Andrieu S., Blasimme A., Dray C., Rial-Sebbag E., Valet P., Dantoine T., Cardinaud N., Castelli M., Charenton-Blavignac M., Ciccolari-Micaldi C., Gayot C., Laubarie-Mouriet C., Marchesseau D., Mergans T., Nguyen T. B., Papon A., Ribet J., Saulinier I., Tchalla A., Rapp T., Sirven N., Skalska A., Blaszcyk E., Cwynar M., Czesak J., Fatyga P., Fedyk-Lukasik M., Grodzicki T., Jamrozik P., Janusz Z., Klimek E., Komoniewska S., Kret M., Ozog M., Parnicka A., Petitjean K., Pietrzyk A., Skalska-Dulinska B., Starzyk D., Szczerbinska K., Witkiewicz B., Wlodarczyk A., Sinclair A., Harris S., Ogborne A., Ritchie S., Sinclair C., Sinclair H., Bellary S., Worthington H., Derejczyk J., Roller-Wirnsberger R., Jonsson P., Bordes P., Arnaud S., Asbrand C., Bejuit R., Durand S., Flechsenhar K., Joly F., Lain R. L., Moncharmont M., Msihid J., Ndja A., Riche B., Weber A. C., Yuan J., Roubenoff R., Kortebein P., Miller R. R., Gorostiaga C., Belissa-Mathiot P., Hu H., Laigle L., Melchor I. M., Russel A., Bennecky M., Haws T., Joshi A., Philpott K., Walker A., Zia G., Giorgi S. D., Feletti L., Marchioro E., Mocci F., Varesio M. G., Cesario A., Cabin B., de Boer W. P., Ignaszewski C., Klingmann I., Vollenbroek-Hutten M., Hermens T., Jansen-Kosterink S., Tabak M., Blandin P., Coutard L., Lenzotti A. -M., Mokhtari H., Rodon N., RS: MHeNs - R1 - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, RS: CAPHRI - R1 - Ageing and Long-Term Care, Health Services Research, Handicap, Activité, Vieillissement, Autonomie, Environnement (HAVAE), Institut Génomique, Environnement, Immunité, Santé, Thérapeutique (GEIST), Université de Limoges (UNILIM)-Université de Limoges (UNILIM), Clinicum, Department of General Practice and Primary Health Care, University of Helsinki, HUS Internal Medicine and Rehabilitation, Timo Strandberg / Principal Investigator, Department of Medicine, Helsinki University Hospital Area, Teachers' Academy, Jyvakorpi S.K., Ramel A., Strandberg T.E., Piotrowicz K., Blaszczyk-Bebenek E., Urtamo A., Rempe H.M., Geirsdottir O., Vagnerova T., Billot M., Larreur A., Savera G., Soriano G., Picauron C., Tagliaferri S., Sanchez-Puelles C., Cadenas V.S., Perl A., Tirrel L., Ohman H., Weling-Scheepers C., Ambrosi S., Costantini A., Pavelkova K., Klimkova M., Freiberger E., Jonsson P.V., Marzetti E., Pitkala K.H., Landi F., Calvani R., Bernabei R., Boni C., Brandi V., Broccatelli M., Celesti C., Cicchetti A., Collamati A., Coretti S., D'Angelo E., D'Elia M., Landi G., Lorenzi M., Mariotti L., Martone A.M., Ortolani E., Pafundi T., Picca A., Ruggeri M., Salini S., Tosato M., Vetrano D.L., Lattanzio F., Baldoni R., Bernabei S., Bonfigli A.R., Bustacchini S., Carrieri B., Cassetta L., Cherubini A., Cucchi M., Cucchieri G., Costantini A.R., Dell'Aquila G., Espinosa E., Fedecostante M., Fraternali R., Galeazzi R., Mengarelli A., Piomboni S., Posacki E., Severini E., Tregambe T., Trotta F., Maggio M., Lauretani F., Butto V., Fisichella A., Guareschi C., Longobucco Y., Di Bari M., Rodriguez-Manas L., Alamo S., Bouzon C.A., Gonzales Turin J., Zafra O.L.L., Picazo A.L., Sepulveda L.P., SanchezSanchez J.L., Puelles C.S., Aragones M.V., CruzJentoft A.J., Santos J.A., Alvarez-Nebreda L., JimenezJimenez N.F., Nozal J.M.-D., Montero-Errasquin B., Moreno B.P.B.P., Roldan-Plaza C., Vicente A.R.-D., Sanchez-Cadenas V., Sanchez-Castellano C., Sanchez-Garcia E., Vaquero-Pinto M.N., Topinkova E., Bautzka L., Blechova K., Gueye T., Juklickova I., Klbikova T., Krenkova J.J., Madlova P., Mejstrikova H., Melcova R., Michalkova H., Ryznarova I., Drastichova I., Hasalikova E., Hucko R., Jakub S., Janacova M., Kilmkova M., Parizkova M., Redrova M., Ruskova P.P., Sieber C.C., Auerswald T., Engel C., Franke A., Freibergen E., Freiheit U., Gotthardt S., Kampe K., Kob R., Kokott C., Kraska C., Meyer C., Reith V., Rempe H., Schoene D., Sieber G., Zielinski K., Anker S.D., Ebner N., Grutz R., von Haehling S., Schols A.M.W.J., Gosker H., Huysmans S., Quaaden S., Schols J.M., Smeets N., Stevens P., van de Bool C., Weling C., Strandberg T., Jyvakorpi S., Hallikas K., Herranen M., Huusko T., Hytonen L., Ikonen K., Karppi-Sjoblom A., Karvinen K., Kayhty M., Kindsted T., Landstrom E., Leirimaa S., Pitkala K., Punkka A., Saavalainen A.-M., Salo T., Sepa M., Sohlberg K., Vaatamoinen E., Venalainen S., Vanhanen H., Vellas B., Van Kan G.A., Biville V., Brigitte L., Cervera C., Cesari M., Champarnaud M., Cluzan C., Croizet M., Dardenne S., Dorard M., Dupuy C., Durand E., Faisant C., Fougere B., Girard P., Guyonnet S., Hoogendijk E., Mauroux R., Milhet A., Montel S., Ousset P.-J., Teguo M.T., Teysseyre B., Andrieu S., Blasimme A., Dray C., Rial-Sebbag E., Valet P., Dantoine T., Cardinaud N., Castelli M., Charenton-Blavignac M., Ciccolari-Micaldi C., Gayot C., Laubarie-Mouriet C., Marchesseau D., Mergans T., Nguyen T.B., Papon A., Ribet J., Saulinier I., Tchalla A., Rapp T., Sirven N., Skalska A., Blaszcyk E., Cwynar M., Czesak J., Fatyga P., Fedyk-Lukasik M., Grodzicki T., Jamrozik P., Janusz Z., Klimek E., Komoniewska S., Kret M., Ozog M., Parnicka A., Petitjean K., Pietrzyk A., Skalska-Dulinska B., Starzyk D., Szczerbinska K., Witkiewicz B., Wlodarczyk A., Sinclair A., Harris S., Ogborne A., Ritchie S., Sinclair C., Sinclair H., Bellary S., Worthington H., Derejczyk J., Roller-Wirnsberger R., Jonsson P., Bordes P., Arnaud S., Asbrand C., Bejuit R., Durand S., Flechsenhar K., Joly F., Lain R.L., Moncharmont M., Msihid J., Ndja A., Riche B., Weber A.C., Yuan J., Roubenoff R., Kortebein P., Miller R.R., Gorostiaga C., Belissa-Mathiot P., Hu H., Laigle L., Melchor I.M., Russel A., Bennecky M., Haws T., Joshi A., Philpott K., Walker A., Zia G., Giorgi S.D., Feletti L., Marchioro E., Mocci F., Varesio M.G., Cesario A., Cabin B., de Boer W.P., Ignaszewski C., Klingmann I., Vollenbroek-Hutten M., Hermens T., Jansen-Kosterink S., Tabak M., Blandin P., Coutard L., Lenzotti A.-M., Mokhtari H., Rodon N., Epidemiology and Data Science, APH - Aging & Later Life, and APH - Quality of Care
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0301 basic medicine ,Gerontology ,Sarcopenia ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Population ,PROTEIN ,RECOMMENDATIONS ,law.invention ,SUPPLEMENTATION ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,Cultural diversity ,medicine ,Nutrition counselling ,Nutrition intervention ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,education ,Exercise ,Aged ,2. Zero hunger ,education.field_of_study ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Frailty ,business.industry ,Settore MED/09 - MEDICINA INTERNA ,ADULTS ,medicine.disease ,mobility ,3. Good health ,Feasibility Studie ,Malnutrition ,SPRINTT ,resistance exercise ,muscle mass ,Protein intake ,3121 General medicine, internal medicine and other clinical medicine ,Feasibility Studies ,Energy intake ,Independent Living ,business ,Nutrition counseling ,Research Paper ,Human - Abstract
Aim To describe the methods and feasibility of the nutritional intervention carried out within the SPRINTT Randomized cotrolled trial. We also illustrate how nutrition interventionists identified participants at risk of malnutrition and the lessons learnt from the nutrition intervention. Findings SPRINTT nutrition intervention was well-received by the majority of the participants. It was mainly carried out using tailored nutrition counselling, but also other means of delivering the intervention were successfully used. Compared with a standard nutrition prescription, an individualized protocol to diagnose malnutrition and follow-up by tailored nutrition counselling helped achieve nutritional targets more effectively in spite of diversity of population in nutritional habits and in some cases reluctance to accept changes. Message The SPRINTT nutrition intervention was feasible and allowed flexibility to the varying needs and cultural differences of this heterogeneous population of frail, older Europeans. It may serve as a model to educate and improve nutrition among community-dwelling older people at risk of mobility limitations. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s41999-020-00438-4., Background The “Sarcopenia and Physical Frailty in Older People: Multicomponent Treatment Strategies” (SPRINTT) project sponsored a multi-center randomized controlled trial (RCT) with the objective to determine the effect of physical activity and nutrition intervention for prevention of mobility disability in community-dwelling frail older Europeans. We describe here the design and feasibility of the SPRINTT nutrition intervention, including techniques used by nutrition interventionists to identify those at risk of malnutrition and to carry out the nutrition intervention. Methods SPRINTT RCT recruited older adults (≥ 70 years) from 11 European countries. Eligible participants (n = 1517) had functional limitations measured with Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB score 3–9) and low muscle mass as determined by DXA scans, but were able to walk 400 m without assistance within 15 min. Participants were followed up for up to 3 years. The nutrition intervention was carried out mainly by individual nutrition counseling. Nutrition goals included achieving a daily protein intake of 1.0–1.2 g/kg body weight, energy intake of 25–30 kcal/kg of body weight/day, and serum vitamin D concentration ≥ 75 mmol/L. Survey on the method strategies and feasibility of the nutrition intervention was sent to all nutrition interventionists of the 16 SPRINTT study sites. Results Nutrition interventionists from all study sites responded to the survey. All responders found that the SPRINTT nutrition intervention was feasible for the target population, and it was well received by the majority. The identification of participants at nutritional risk was accomplished by combining information from interviews, questionnaires, clinical and laboratory data. Although the nutrition intervention was mainly carried out using individual nutritional counselling, other assisting methods were used as appropriate. Conclusion The SPRINTT nutrition intervention was feasible and able to adapt flexibly to varying needs of this heterogeneous population. The procedures adopted to identify older adults at risk of malnutrition and to design the appropriate intervention may serve as a model to deliver nutrition intervention for community-dwelling older people with mobility limitations. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s41999-020-00438-4.
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- 2021
87. Intentionality and the Welfare of Minded Non-Humans
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Blasimme, Alessandro and Bortolotti, Lisa
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- 2010
88. Ethics, Values, and Responsibility in Human Genome Editing
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Alessandro Blasimme and Sean C. McConnell
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Issues, ethics and legal aspects ,Health (social science) ,Health Policy ,Human genome ,Computational biology ,Biology - Published
- 2019
89. The ethics of geriatric care
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Blasimme, Alessandro, primary
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- 2022
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90. Machine Learning in Paediatrics and the Childs's Right to An Open Future
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Blasimme, Alessandro, primary
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- 2022
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91. Assessing the Governance of Digital Contact Tracing in Response to COVID-19: Results of a Multi-National Study
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Hutler, Brian, primary, Blasimme, Alessandro, additional, Gur-Arie, Rachel, additional, Ali, Joseph, additional, Barnhill, Anne, additional, Hood, Amelia, additional, Kahn, Jeffrey, additional, Perkins, Nancy L., additional, Regenberg, Alan, additional, and Vayena, Effy, additional
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- 2022
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92. Transparency About Governance Contributes to Biobanks' Trustworthiness: Call for Action
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Felix Gille, Renata Axler, and Alessandro Blasimme
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Canada ,Best practice ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Good governance ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Empirical evidence ,Biological Specimen Banks ,Social Responsibility ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Public relations ,Private sector ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Biobank ,Transparency (behavior) ,Europe ,Accountability ,Business - Abstract
This article examines biobank transparency mechanisms vis-à-vis their public information, as found on the public biobank webpages. Two independent studies about biobank governance in Europe and Canada identified a lack of governance-related information provided by biobanks on their public webpages. This lack of transparency stands in contrast to governance best practice guidelines highlighting the importance of transparency as a principle of good governance. Transparency is especially important as many biobanks are publicly funded, and it contributes to accountability and supports the development of donor trust in biobanks. Empirical evidence shows that the public supports greater transparency about biobank governance. It will be important that information provided online is relevant and accessible for a variety of different stakeholders (e.g. public and private sector scientists and institutions, donors and potential donors, members of the public). Transparency standards, however, need to be proportionate to avoid the situation that only large-scale biobanks can allocate appropriate resources to fulfil them. Implementing adequate standards of transparency about biobanks' governance will increase accountability but also allow current and future participants to make more informed decisions about their participation in biobank activities.
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- 2021
93. 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
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94. [Aducanumab and Alzheimer's disease: a critical reflection.]
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Nicola, Vanacore, Alessandro, Blasimme, and Marco, Canevelli
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Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Alzheimer Disease ,United States Food and Drug Administration ,Humans ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,United States - Abstract
On June 7, 2021, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved aducanumab, a monoclonal amyloid targeting β-amyloid, for the treatment for Alzheimer's disease (AD). This decision was achieved through the Accelerated Approval Pathway and was essentially motivated by the evidence that aducanumab reduces brain amyloid plaques. This news is causing a heated debate in the scientific community. On the one hand, aducanumab is the first drug to be approved for the treatment of the disease since 2003 and is the first drug to act on the alleged pathophysiological mechanisms of AD. At the same time, the evidence of clinical benefit coming from two phase 3 clinical trials is contradictory and still inconclusive. The aim of the present editorial is to provide some points to consider that can help understand the peculiarities and implications of this approval and feed the scientific debate underway.
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- 2021
95. Rethinking ageing: introduction
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Marco J. Nathan, Giovanni Boniolo, and Alessandro Blasimme
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History ,Philosophy of science ,Philosophy of biology ,Introduction ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,MEDLINE ,Environmental ethics ,Psychology ,History of science - Published
- 2021
96. Digital Contact Tracing Against COVID-19 in Europe: Current Features and Ongoing Developments
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Blasimme, Alessandro, Ferretti, Agata, and Vayena, Effy
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digital contact tracing ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,QA75.5-76.95 ,privacy ,APP ,Digital Contact Tracing ,Governance ,Privacy ,Epidemiology ,Europe ,governance ,Electronic computers. Computer science ,Digital Health ,Medicine ,epidemiology ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Original Research - Abstract
The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic is a public health challenge of unprecedented scale. In the midst of the first wave of the pandemic, governments worldwide introduced digital contact tracing systems as part of a strategy to contain the spread of the virus. In Europe, after intense discussion about privacy-related risks involving policymakers, technology experts, information technology companies, and—albeit to a limited extent—the public at large, technical protocols were created to support the development of privacy-compatible proximity tracing apps. However, as the second wave of SARS-CoV-2 sweeps the continent, digital contact tracing in Europe is evolving in terms of both technological and governance features. To enable policymakers to harness the full potential of digital health tools against SARS-CoV-2, this paper examines the evolution of digital contact tracing in eight European countries. Our study highlights that while privacy and data protection are at the core of contact tracing apps in Europe, countries differ in their technical protocols, and in their capacity to utilize collected data beyond proximity tracing alone. In particular, the most recently released apps tend to offer users more granular information about risk in specific locations, and to collect data about user whereabouts, in order to enhance retrospective contact tracing capacity. These developments signal a shift from a strict interpretation of data minimization and purpose limitation toward a more expansive approach to digital contact tracing in Europe, calling for careful scrutiny and appropriate oversight., Frontiers in Digital Health, 3, ISSN:2673-253X
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- 2021
97. Towards Adaptive Governance in Big Data Health Research
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Vayena, Effy, Blasimme, Alessandro, Laurie, Graeme, Ganguli-Mitra, Agomoni, McMillan, Catriona, Postan, Emily, Sethi, Nayha, and Sorbie, Annie
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In recent times, biomedical research has begun to tap into larger-than-ever collections of different data types. As a consequence, the notion of health data – data that are of relevance for health-related research or for clinical purposes – is expanding to include a variety of non-clinical data, as well as data provided by research participants themselves through commercially available products such as smartphones and fitness bands. To date, most scholarship and policy on these issues has focused on privacy and data protection. Less attention has been paid to addressing other aspects of the wicked challenges posed by big data health research and even less work has been geared towards the development of novel governance frameworks. In this chapter, we make the case for adaptive and principle-based governance of big data research. We outline six principles of adaptive governance for big data research and propose key factors for their implementation into effective governance structures and processes., Cambridge Law Handbooks, The Cambridge Handbook of Health Research Regulation, ISBN:978-1-108-47597-6, ISBN:978-1-108-62002-4
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- 2021
98. Shifting the Focus of Dementia Prevention: Ethical Considerations
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Blasimme, Alessandro, primary, Canevelli, Marco, additional, and Cesari, Matteo, additional
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- 2021
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99. Digital bioethics: introducing new methods for the study of bioethical issues
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Schneider, Manuel, primary, Vayena, Effy, additional, and Blasimme, Alessandro, additional
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- 2021
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100. Machine learning in medicine: Addressing ethical challenges
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Vayena, Effy, Blasimme, Alessandro, and Cohen, I. Glenn
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Machine learning -- Usage ,Health care industry -- Technology application -- Services ,Personal information -- Usage -- Safety and security measures ,Adults -- Health aspects ,Health care reform ,Nurses ,Medical students ,Artificial intelligence ,Health care industry ,Technology application ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Author(s): Effy Vayena 1,*, Alessandro Blasimme 1, I. Glenn Cohen 2 A recent United Kingdom survey reports that 63% of the adult population is uncomfortable with allowing personal data to [...]
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- 2018
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