Health as a genetic planning project: enthusiasm and second thoughts among biomedical researchers and their research subjects

Abstract This paper presents an interview study among scientists working with Decode genetics in Iceland and lay individuals having recently donated blood to Decode. While genuinely enthusiastic that genetic technologies hold great potential to avert disease, the informants shared concerns that exte...

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Main Authors: Hjörleifsson, Stefán, Strand, Roger, Schei, Edvin
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central Ltd. 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.lsspjournal.com/content/1/3/52
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spelling ftbiomed:oai:biomedcentral.com:1746-5354-1-3-52 2023-05-15T16:51:17+02:00 Health as a genetic planning project: enthusiasm and second thoughts among biomedical researchers and their research subjects Hjörleifsson, Stefán Strand, Roger Schei, Edvin 2005-12-15 http://www.lsspjournal.com/content/1/3/52 en eng BioMed Central Ltd. http://www.lsspjournal.com/content/1/3/52 Copyright 1900 ESRC Genomics Network Article 2005 ftbiomed 2013-05-05T00:10:29Z Abstract This paper presents an interview study among scientists working with Decode genetics in Iceland and lay individuals having recently donated blood to Decode. While genuinely enthusiastic that genetic technologies hold great potential to avert disease, the informants shared concerns that extensive predictive genetic testing, preventive treatment and tailoring of lifestyle to avoid potential disease may cause loss of freedom - people can "worry themselves sick". Undiscriminating use of genetic technologies in privileged populations was seen as a potential source of injustice and reduced tolerance of diversity. Both lay informants and scientists revealed ambiguity and inconsistency in their personal evaluation of genetic knowledge, indicating that 'rational choice' models do not predict how people relate to information about risk, expert knowledge notwithstanding. Drawing on work by Wynne and van Hooft, we submit that our informants' ambivalence and second thoughts are implicit contradictions of prescriptive messages accompanying human genetics - i.e. more or less covert and non-intentional claims about the rational obligation to minimise the likelihood that one falls ill and a strictly biological conception of health. Genetic technologies designed to prevent or combat organic disease can interfere negatively with non-biological levels of health. It is a challenge of reflexive modernity to untangle the interaction of human genetics with culturally mediated categories of relatedness, purpose and meaning in everyday life, and mobilise cultural and governance resources which can ensure that genetic technologies support human subjectivity and health in their full range. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland BioMed Central
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collection BioMed Central
op_collection_id ftbiomed
language English
description Abstract This paper presents an interview study among scientists working with Decode genetics in Iceland and lay individuals having recently donated blood to Decode. While genuinely enthusiastic that genetic technologies hold great potential to avert disease, the informants shared concerns that extensive predictive genetic testing, preventive treatment and tailoring of lifestyle to avoid potential disease may cause loss of freedom - people can "worry themselves sick". Undiscriminating use of genetic technologies in privileged populations was seen as a potential source of injustice and reduced tolerance of diversity. Both lay informants and scientists revealed ambiguity and inconsistency in their personal evaluation of genetic knowledge, indicating that 'rational choice' models do not predict how people relate to information about risk, expert knowledge notwithstanding. Drawing on work by Wynne and van Hooft, we submit that our informants' ambivalence and second thoughts are implicit contradictions of prescriptive messages accompanying human genetics - i.e. more or less covert and non-intentional claims about the rational obligation to minimise the likelihood that one falls ill and a strictly biological conception of health. Genetic technologies designed to prevent or combat organic disease can interfere negatively with non-biological levels of health. It is a challenge of reflexive modernity to untangle the interaction of human genetics with culturally mediated categories of relatedness, purpose and meaning in everyday life, and mobilise cultural and governance resources which can ensure that genetic technologies support human subjectivity and health in their full range.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hjörleifsson, Stefán
Strand, Roger
Schei, Edvin
spellingShingle Hjörleifsson, Stefán
Strand, Roger
Schei, Edvin
Health as a genetic planning project: enthusiasm and second thoughts among biomedical researchers and their research subjects
author_facet Hjörleifsson, Stefán
Strand, Roger
Schei, Edvin
author_sort Hjörleifsson, Stefán
title Health as a genetic planning project: enthusiasm and second thoughts among biomedical researchers and their research subjects
title_short Health as a genetic planning project: enthusiasm and second thoughts among biomedical researchers and their research subjects
title_full Health as a genetic planning project: enthusiasm and second thoughts among biomedical researchers and their research subjects
title_fullStr Health as a genetic planning project: enthusiasm and second thoughts among biomedical researchers and their research subjects
title_full_unstemmed Health as a genetic planning project: enthusiasm and second thoughts among biomedical researchers and their research subjects
title_sort health as a genetic planning project: enthusiasm and second thoughts among biomedical researchers and their research subjects
publisher BioMed Central Ltd.
publishDate 2005
url http://www.lsspjournal.com/content/1/3/52
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://www.lsspjournal.com/content/1/3/52
op_rights Copyright 1900 ESRC Genomics Network
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