If you want to discover your genetic history and where you came from... you’ve found the right place!

888-806-2588

review of scientific and news articles on dna testing and popular genetics

Officious or Official Regulation?

Thursday, October 22, 2009
Council of Europe adopts protocol on genetic testing for health purposes

In a report so-titled by Laurence Lwoff in the European Journal of Human Genetics (2009) 17, 1374–1377, first published online in July, it was noted that the Council of Europe has weighed in on one of the most controversial areas of DNA testing, whole-genome sequencing and SNP testing to find genetic predisposition to disease for individual customers. Recent editorials in Nature have called for similar measures in the United States, which is home to 23&me and other companies offering such services.

So far, no regulatory proposals have been aimed at genetic ancestry testing, only medical and health-related screening. One of the warnings often raised in the public discussion on genetic testing for health purposes, however, is that results may confuse and unnecessarily alarm consumers--a criticism that could apply equally to ancestry services.  Another is that commercial research scientists and business operators may jump the gun with findings and peddle bad science, although critics admit that the state of knowledge on nearly every topic of interest to geneticists and medical researchers is in a constant state of flux. A finding about a gene for Alzheimer's will be trumpeted in the pages of a major journal one week only to be updated or withdrawn in the next. 
 
This being the case, one wonders when discoveries will ever be fit to be commercialized or made available to the public. Should science only serve scientists?

We have always maintained that the would-be regulators underestimate moderately educated people's ability to understand emerging science. They overestimate commercial companies' disregard for professional practices and responsible communications. Most of the measures under discussion will have the effect of denying people access to valuable information. Regulation will also hamper growth in a direct-to-the-consumer business with unimaginable promise for society at large. A home paternity test purchased at the corner drugstore may make all the difference in the life of a family. Discovery of varied ancestry through a DNA test can be an important factor in furthering a consumer's interest in other peoples and countries, in history, and ultimately in tolerance of others. DNA testing can help bring peace of mind but it can also help bring peace in the world. 

Many, if not most, of the innovative contributions to society by science have come from non-specialists. The scientific establishment is not oriented toward practical applications of knowledge. The Croatian inventor and engineer Nikola Tesla dropped out of college and never received any formal training. Driven entirely by his natural aptitude for learning, he patented some of the most important contributions to the birth of commercial electricity, including alternating  current (AC) electric power systems and the AC motor. His inventions helped usher in the Second Industrial Revolution. So far from being overpowered by the profit motive, he died penniless at the age of 86 in 1943. No government program or university gave him any support or assistance. Whatever else the Council of Europe deliberated about, we hope they were not cynical or self-important enough to discount the possibility there may be many more popular scientists like Tesla in Europe's future. Science and technology are increasingly becoming a way of life for millions of people around the world who do not happen to have an advanced degree. It is a positive sign that consumers are so eager to take responsibility for their own health they will use the latest innovations from genomics to gain knowledge and control. Scientists should be glad they have such an impact. They should not squander the respect they enjoy in our eyes with pedantic discussions about fixing something that is not broken.  

Isolated populations as treasure troves in genetic epidemiology:  the case of the Basques

Paolo Garagnani et al. (2009) in European Journal of Human Genetics 17: 1490-1494.

The Basques living on the western border between Spain and France are a unique population. "Basques" often comes up as a match in people's DNA Fingerprint results, often because (as is widely believed, at least) a people resembling Basques helped repopulate the British Isles after the last Ice Age. But Basques are not an isolate. This article proves they blend gradually into their closest neighboring populations in Spain and France so they are not a candidate population, as say the Finns are, for the study of disease associations. "Basques do not show the genetic properties expected in population isolates," according to the authors. On the contrary, as many previous studies suggest, the Basques have so much diversity among themselves they were probably the source of population diffusions in prehistory, not a backwater trap for inbreeding.
  
Comments

Anonymous commented on 22-Oct-2009 11:28 PM

This is most perplexing and sounds medieval. Does the Council of Europe think we are all children? Are they truly concerned that their citizens may become confused and alarmed? What planet are they living on currently? I suppose they are unaware (or have forgotten) that Darwin had a background in religion (how alarming). This is 2009 and the world is an alarming place. One gets rather used to it though after a number of years. There must be some other reason than this for their suggested protocol. Something truly alarming.


Please tell us what you think

Name, website, and email are optional; if we publish your comment, your name will be shown, and may be linked to your website if provided, but the email you enter will not be published.





Captcha Image

Bookmark and Share

 

 


Recent Posts


Tags

Micmac Indians Mary Settegast medicine Melungeon Heritage Association Telltown Austronesian, Filipinos, Australoid Ashkenazi Jews haplogroup T population isolates Algonquian Indians anthropology Finnish people Choctaw Indians HapMap population genetics Helladic art Anglo-Saxons genetics Cohen Modal Haplotype Bradshaw Foundation Europe cannibalism Turkic DNA Neanderthals Gravettian culture EURO DNA Fingerprint Test Sea Peoples evolution Anne Marie Fine Plato Michael Grant DNA testing companies INORA personal genomics Tutankamun Cleopatra FOX News Middle Eastern DNA Hopi Indians Kentucky ethnicity Phoenicians Peter Parham Anasazi Etruscans Maronites Stacy Schiff news Stone Age North African DNA BATWING immunology Zuni Indians Gypsies Shlomo Sand Egyptians mitochondrial DNA haplogroup U Chris Stringer European DNA Jone Entine Denisovans Magdalenian culture Basques Nova Scotia George Starr-Bresette Lebanon Caucasian Pima Indians Greeks Britain China Melanesians seafaring Elizabeth C. Hirschman corn Kurgan Culture Italy Melungeon Union rock art Celts Khazars Current Anthropology Riane Eisler mental foramen Great Goddess Gunnar Thompson human migrations Keros Jews genomics labs linguistics Maya Barack Obama N. Brent Kennedy education Normans Melungeons climate change Stephen Oppenheimer Irish history African DNA clan symbols Iran Tifaneg India Arizona State University Abenaki Indians genealogy England Indo-Europeans Hohokam Indians human leukocyte antigens Y chromosomal haplogroups Alabama Neolithic Revolution Asian DNA ethics haplogroup X Applied Epistemology Jewish genetics Havasupai Indians French Canadians autosomal DNA Middle Ages Pueblo Indians Sorbs Joseph Jacobs history of science Paleolithic Age Theodore Steinberg Teresa Panther-Yates Donald N. Yates Belgium religion Abraham Lincoln health and medicine American history Native American DNA Test Roma People Freemont Indians Y chromosome DNA ancient DNA BBCNews Panther's Lodge Colin Renfrew archeology Population genetics Ireland surnames haplogroup B haplogroup J Acadians Wendy Roth Akhenaten Russia ethnic markers Marija Gimbutas DNA Fingerprint Test Cajuns M. J. Harper Arabia Phyllis Starnes occipital bun French DNA Native American DNA Cherokee DNA prehistory Nikola Tesla myths DNA Fingerprint Test

Archive