American Medical Association Calls for Privacy Guidelines Governing Mail-Order DNA Tests
Taking a cheek swab and sending it to a mail-order DNA testing company takes only a few minutes, but the information might live on forever--and become widely available.
At its Interim Special meeting, the
"People curious about their ancestry shouldn't be worried that the data extracted from saliva will be shared," said
The
While federal law prevents health insurance companies and employers from discriminating based on genetic information, these restrictions do not apply to life, disability, or long-term care insurance companies, which can result in insurance application rejections. Users of consumer genetic testing should be advised of the potential risks of their participation.
The AMA will advocate to add long-term care, life, and disability insurance to the federal law overseeing genetic testing. The AMA also will support privacy standards that would prohibit pharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, universities, and other entities with financial ties to genetic testing companies from sharing identified information without the consent of the tested individual.
The
Law enforcement agencies requesting private medical information should be given access only through a court order that shows the need for the information outweighs the privacy interest.
"As physicians, we are bound by our ethics and the law to safeguard our patients' health records. Mail-order tests, while not administered by physicians, are nonetheless health records. People should be aware of that--and so should regulators,"
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