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Genetic Testing Ethics Article
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This is a selection made from among articles on Genetic Testing Ethics. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.
Paternity testing is state regulated
from:Although dna paternity tests are admissible in most courts of law, it is recommended that you check your state for regulations. This type of testing can provide certainty or uncertainty depending on the results; whichever the test declares it will clear up all doubt. Who can do a paternity test is a good question to ask; not all doctor offices or laboratories can perform these tests, so it is a good idea to do some research to see who can.
There are several ways for the mother to test the father of the child without him knowing; she just has to be for certain that her method can be tested. By comparing the genetic material of a child to that of any adults involved in the situation, there is a very good chance the parents can be found. This will ensure that the child will grow up calling the correct man daddy as well as provide certainty to the father whom once questioned whether or not the child was really his. This test is performed on a regular basis; however, there are still not a lot of companies whom practice performing this sort of testing. These two components are often used to help win child support battles in front of the judge; however, in some states the test will not hold up in a court of law.
By comparing the percent of matching dna from the child and the contribution of the donor, a match can be made for paternity. This type of test is especially useful in inheritance issues; when wealthy people become deceased children who were never associated with the family suddenly pop up. A family can find out very quickly if there is a biological relationship between a child and a father with a paternity test. While this particular test can be performed in doctor's lab by professionals, you can also perform it at home and send the results into a lab. This test is often used to provide additional evidence in difficult paternity cases in which the alleged father is claiming not to be the biological father. Costs for dna testing generally vary from lab to lab depending upon the size and condition of the sample to be tested.
This will ensure you have received the most conclusive and accurate results for the test that you paid hundreds of dollars for. Typically there are some errors in a paternity testing done at home; some individuals do not completely read the directions and use the same kit on two individuals. This type of testing does not require a significant amount of blood sampling from the father in question or the child.
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Genetic Testing Ethics Specific links
Genetic Testing Ethics News
Genetic Testing in Cancer: Ethical Issues - Cancer Network
Genetic Testing in Cancer: Ethical Issues Cancer Network [1] However, the incorporation of genetic testing into cancer prevention has proved problematic, creating ethical barriers to care. One of the most significant barriers to integrating genetic testing into cancer prevention is health professionals' lack ... |
Ethics: Withhold Genetic Test Results if Mother Will Abort? - Medscape
Ethics: Withhold Genetic Test Results if Mother Will Abort? Medscape I am at the Department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy at the University of Pennsylvania. I want to talk to you today about a provocative question: Can a doctor lie about the results of a genetic test if he or she thinks that they might lead to an ... |
Focus Groups Share Thoughts on Direct-To-Consumer Genetic Tests - RedOrbit
![]() RedOrbit | Focus Groups Share Thoughts on Direct-To-Consumer Genetic Tests RedOrbit Researchers at Loyola University Chicago's Stritch School of Medicine have found that patients see both benefits and risks from direct-to-consumer genetic tests. Dr. Katherine Wasson, a specialist on the ethics of direct-to-consumer genetic tests, ... |
Rare Corporate Courage and Common Sense - Right Side News
Rare Corporate Courage and Common Sense Right Side News So this rare display of corporate courage, ethics and common sense should be applauded. FWW launched its campaign in January 2012, claiming GE corn “hasn't been tested for human safety” and contains DNA traits that “are potentially unsafe. |
How to talk to patients about genetic testing - American Medical News
How to talk to patients about genetic testing American Medical News The April issue of the Journal of Genetic Counseling has 16 articles on the topic. Suggestions from that issue include emphasis not only on principle-based ethics, but also on the “ethic of care,” namely, the desirability of having an empathic personal ... |
Patients See Benefits and Risks to Direct-to-Consumer Genetics Tests - Newswise (press release)
Patients See Benefits and Risks to Direct-to-Consumer Genetics Tests Newswise (press release) Wasson, an assistant professor in Loyola's Neiswanger Institute for Bioethics and Health Policy, is an expert on the ethics of direct-to-consumer genetics tests. More than a dozen companies, including 23andMe, deCODE Genetics and Navigenics, ... |
College or Funeral Is Mother's Wish Denied on DNA Results - Bloomberg
![]() Bloomberg | College or Funeral Is Mother's Wish Denied on DNA Results Bloomberg Many research subjects want to know what their genetic testing shows, even when they've agreed to remain ignorant. A survey of 279 people published last year in the Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics found that 71 percent of those ... |
Will Gattaca Come True? - Slate Magazine
Will Gattaca Come True? Slate Magazine Noninvasive, early fetal tests for sex, paternity, and chromosomal conditions will change pregnancy dramatically—and raise tricky ethical questions. By Mara Hvistendahl|Posted Friday, April 27, 2012, at 7:30 AM ET In 2003, back when such things ... |
Home DNA kits -- to test or not to test? - Marketplace.org
![]() Marketplace.org | Home DNA kits -- to test or not to test? Marketplace.org All you have to do is take a home DNA test. Art Caplan is the incoming medical ethics head at NYU. He says, "The technology is pretty remarkable. You can certainly look for different distinctive markers on your genes and find them and say look all ... |
Does Patenting Genes Stifle Innovation and Health Care Access? - Voice of San Diego
Does Patenting Genes Stifle Innovation and Health Care Access? Voice of San Diego After BRCA1 and BRCA2 were patented, Myriad Genetics developed genetic tests for these genes. While the initial funding investment and scientific efforts to develop these tests have been acknowledged, the monopoly created by this ownership has resulted ... |



