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			| Cynthetiq | 02-04-2010 06:49 PM |  
 The government is collecting DNA
 
	Quote: 
	
		| View: The government has your baby's DNA
 Source: CNN
 posted with the TFP thread generator
 
 The government has your baby's DNA
 
 By  Elizabeth Cohen, CNN Senior Medical  Correspondent
 February  4, 2010 9:11 a.m. EST
 
 http://i.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2010/HEA...ep.gov.dna.jpg
 Anne  Brown worries that someone could gain access to the DNA sample from her  daughter Isabel with Isabel's name attached.
 
 STORY HIGHLIGHTS
 
 (CNN) -- When Annie Brown's daughter, Isabel, was  a month old, her pediatrician asked Brown and her husband to sit down  because he had some bad news to tell them: Isabel carried a gene that  put her at risk for cystic fibrosis.Genetic  testing for newborns started in the 1960sSpecimens are often  given to outside researchersScientists have said the collection  of DNA samples is a "gold mine" for doing research
 
 While grateful to have the  information -- Isabel received further testing and she doesn't have the  disease -- the Mankato, Minnesota, couple wondered how the doctor knew  about Isabel's genes in the first place. After all, they'd never  consented to genetic testing.
 
 It's simple, the pediatrician  answered: Newborn babies in the United States are routinely screened for  a panel of genetic diseases. Since the testing is mandated by the  government, it's often done without the parents' consent, according to  Brad Therrell, director of the National Newborn Screening & Genetics Resource Center.
 
 In many states, such as Florida, where Isabel was born, babies'  DNA is stored indefinitely, according to the resource center.
 
 Many  parents don't realize their baby's DNA is being stored in a government  lab, but sometimes when they find out, as the Browns did, they take  action. Parents in Texas, and Minnesota have filed lawsuits, and these  parents' concerns are sparking a new debate about whether it's  appropriate for a baby's genetic blueprint to be in the government's  possession.
 
 "We were appalled when we found out," says Brown,  who's a registered nurse. "Why do they need to store my baby's DNA  indefinitely? Something on there could affect her ability to get a job  later on, or get health insurance."
 
 According to the state of  Minnesota's Web site, samples are kept so that tests can be repeated, if  necessary, and in case the DNA is ever need to help parents identify a  missing or deceased child. The samples are also used for medical  research.
 
 Art Caplan, a bioethicist at the University of  Pennsylvania, says he understands why states don't first ask permission  to screen babies for genetic diseases. "It's paternalistic, but the  state has an overriding interest in protecting these babies," he says.
 
 However, he added that storage of DNA for long periods of time is a  different matter.
 
 "I don't see any reason to do that kind of  storage," Caplan says. "If it's anonymous, then I don't care. I don't  have an issue with that. But if you keep names attached to those  samples, that makes me nervous."
 
 DNA given to outside  researchers
 Genetic testing for newborns started in the 1960s  with testing for diseases and conditions that, if undetected, could  kill a child or cause severe problems, such as mental retardation. Since  then, the screening has helped save countless newborns.
 
 Over the  years, many other tests were added to the list. Now, states mandate  that newborns be tested for anywhere between 28 and 54 different  conditions, and the DNA samples are stored in state labs for anywhere  from three months to indefinitely, depending on the state. (To find out  how long your baby's DNA is stored, see this  state-by-state list.)
 Brad Therrell, who runs the federally  funded genetic resource consortium, says parents don't need to worry  about the privacy of their babies' DNA.
 "The states have in place  very rigid controls on those specimens," Therrell says. "If my  children's DNA were in one of these state labs, I wouldn't be worried a  bit."
 
 The specimens don't always stay in the state labs. They're  often given to outside researchers -- sometimes with the baby's name  attached.
 According to a study done by the state of Minnesota,  more than 20 scientific papers have been published in the United States  since 2000 using newborn blood samples.
 
 The researchers do not  have to have parental consent to obtain samples as long as the baby's  name is not attached, according to Amy Gaviglio, one of the authors of  the Minnesota report. However, she says it's her understanding that if a  researcher wants a sample with a baby's name attached, consent first  must be obtained from the parents.
 More Empowered  Patient news and advice
 
 Scientists have heralded this  enormous collection of DNA samples as a "gold mine" for doing research,  according to Gaviglio.
 
 "This sample population would be virtually  impossible to get otherwise," says Gaviglio, a genetic counselor for  the Minnesota Department of Health. "Researchers go through a very  stringent process to obtain the samples. States certainly don't provide  samples to just anyone."
 
 Brown says that even with these  assurances, she still worries whether someone could gain access to her  baby's DNA sample with Isabel's name attached.
 
 "I know the  government says my baby's data will be kept private, but I'm not so  sure. I feel like my trust has been taken," she says.
 
 Parents  don't give consent to screening
 Brown says she first lost  trust when she learned that Isabel had received genetic testing in the  first place without consent from her or her husband.
 "I don't  have a problem with the testing, but I wish they'd asked us first," she  says.
 
 Since health insurance paid for Isabel's genetic screening,  her positive test for a cystic fibrosis gene is now on the record with  her insurance company, and the Browns are concerned this could hurt her  in the future.
 
 "It's really a black mark against her, and there's  nothing we can do to get it off there," Brown says. "And let's say in  the future they can test for a gene for schizophrenia or  manic-depression and your baby tests positive -- that would be on there,  too."
 
 Brown says if the hospital had first asked her permission  to test Isabel, now 10 months old, she might have chosen to pay for it  out of pocket so the results wouldn't be known to the insurance company.
 
 Caplan says taking DNA samples without asking permission and then  storing them "veers from the norm."
 
 "In the military, for  instance, they take and store DNA samples, but they tell you they're  doing it, and you can choose not to join if you don't like it," he says.
 
 What can parents do
 In some states, including  Minnesota and Texas, the states are required to destroy a baby's DNA  sample if a parent requests it. Parents who want their baby's DNA  destroyed are asked to fill out this form in Minnesota and this form in Texas.
 
 Parents in other states have  less recourse, says Therrell, who runs the genetic testing group.  "You'd probably have to write a letter to the state saying, 'Please  destroy my sample,'" he says.
 
 He adds, however,  that it's not clear whether a state would necessarily obey your wishes.  "I suspect it would be very difficult to get those states to destroy  your baby's sample," he says.
 
 |  Should the government have access to your DNA? Should they be collecting even anonymous DNA samples? 
 
I don't think that DNA should be collected by the government but like all things for privacy, private companies do more with data than the government does. With private companies though you at least have some respite knowing that it's just that organization. 
 
I'm definitely against the government doing such a thing especially when they didn't notify the parents beforehand. |