Literature DB >> 22773953

Ethical Discourse about the Modification of Food for Therapeutic Purposes: How Patients with Gastrointestinal Diseases View the Good, the Bad, and the Healthy.

Krista L Harrison1, Gail Geller, Patricia Marshall, Jon Tilburt, Marybeth Mercer, Margaret A Brinich, Janelle Highland, Ruth M Farrell, Richard R Sharp.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Researchers have the potential to utilize genetic modification (GM) technologies to create a hybrid of "food" and "medicine" that may challenge traditional understandings of what is "natural". Moral and ethical concerns are likely to arise in any discussion of these therapeutic foods and will affect the integration of products into clinical care and daily life. This study examined how patients with chronic gastrointestinal (GI) diseases view probiotics as future bioengineered therapeutic foods.
METHODS: A multi-site qualitative study consisting of focus groups with chronic GI diseases was conducted at Cleveland Clinic, Mayo Clinic, and Johns Hopkins University
RESULTS: We conducted twenty-two focus groups with 136 patients with major GI diseases between March and August 2009. GI patients associated the term "natural" with concepts of diminished risk and morally "good"; conversely, patients associated the term "unnatural" with things that are "risky," "foreign", and morally "bad". Readily available unmodified probiotics were more commonly described as "natural" while genetically modified probiotics were more commonly labeled as "unnatural" and "risky". However, patients acknowledged that not all natural products are safe, nor are unnatural products always harmful.
CONCLUSIONS: If GI patient perspectives are indicative of public perceptions of therapeutic foods, our findings suggest that the potential benefits and risks of clinical and public health initiatives employing therapeutic foods will be understood in moralistic terms. Bioethicists and others should be sensitive to the implicit normative appeals that are often embedded in the language of what is "natural" and "unnatural".

Entities:  

Year:  2012        PMID: 22773953      PMCID: PMC3389757          DOI: 10.1080/21507716.2012.662574

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AJOB Prim Res        ISSN: 2150-7724


  26 in total

Review 1.  Stakeholder interactions and the development of functional foods.

Authors:  Aine McConnon; Janet Cade; Alan Pearman
Journal:  Public Health Nutr       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 4.022

2.  Naturalness and the genetic modification of animals.

Authors:  Henk Verhoog
Journal:  Trends Biotechnol       Date:  2003-07       Impact factor: 19.536

3.  Building better bugs to deliver biologics in intestinal inflammation.

Authors:  Kim E Barrett
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2010-04       Impact factor: 23.059

4.  Position of the American Dietetic Association: functional foods.

Authors:  Clare M Hasler; Amy C Brown
Journal:  J Am Diet Assoc       Date:  2009-04

5.  With a clean conscience: cleanliness reduces the severity of moral judgments.

Authors:  Simone Schnall; Jennifer Benton; Sophie Harvey
Journal:  Psychol Sci       Date:  2008-12

6.  Fixing the communications failure.

Authors:  Dan Kahan
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2010-01-21       Impact factor: 49.962

Review 7.  Functional foods and dietary supplements: products at the interface between pharma and nutrition.

Authors:  Simone R B M Eussen; Hans Verhagen; Olaf H Klungel; Johan Garssen; Henk van Loveren; Henk J van Kranen; Cathy J M Rompelberg
Journal:  Eur J Pharmacol       Date:  2011-07-27       Impact factor: 4.432

8.  How patients view probiotics: findings from a multicenter study of patients with inflammatory bowel disease and irritable bowel syndrome.

Authors:  MaryBeth Mercer; Margaret A Brinich; Gail Geller; Krista Harrison; Janelle Highland; Katherine James; Patricia Marshall; Jennifer B McCormick; Jon Tilburt; Jean-Paul Achkar; Ruth M Farrell; Richard R Sharp
Journal:  J Clin Gastroenterol       Date:  2012-02       Impact factor: 3.062

9.  Functional foods: consumer attitudes, perceptions, and behaviors in a growing market.

Authors:  Wendy Reinhardt Kapsak; Elizabeth B Rahavi; Nancy M Childs; Christy White
Journal:  J Am Diet Assoc       Date:  2011-06

10.  Preference for natural: instrumental and ideational/moral motivations, and the contrast between foods and medicines.

Authors:  Paul Rozin; Mark Spranca; Zeev Krieger; Ruth Neuhaus; Darlene Surillo; Amy Swerdlin; Katherine Wood
Journal:  Appetite       Date:  2004-10       Impact factor: 3.868

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