Wednesday, May 9, 2012

From U Padua: Genetic Testing for Minors: Comparison between Italian and British Guidelines

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22567400


Genet Res Int. 2012;2012:786930. Epub 2012 Mar 6.

Genetic Testing for Minors: Comparison between Italian and British Guidelines.

Source

Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, Legal Medicine Unit, University of Padua, Via Falloppio 50, 35121 Padua, Italy.

Abstract

Genetic testing in children raises many important ethical, legal, and social issues. One of the main concerns is the ethically inappropriate genetic testing of minors. Various European countries established professional guidelines which reflect the different countries perspectives regarding the main ethical issues involved. In this paper, we analyze the Italian and the British guidelines by highlighting differences and similarities. We discuss presymptomatic, predictive, and carrier testing because we consider them to be the more ethically problematic types of genetic testing in minors. In our opinion, national guidelines should take into account the different needs in clinical practice. At the same time, in the case of genetic testing the national and supranational protection of minors could be strengthened by approving guidelines based on a common framework of principles and values. We suggest that the Oviedo Convention could represent an example of such a common framework or, at least, it could lead to articulate it.

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