| Literature DB >> 31682345 |
Rebekah McWhirter1, Carolyn Johnston2, Jo Burke3.
Abstract
Disclosure of genetic information without consent of the patient (proband) challenges the legal frameworks of privacy and confidentiality. Changes to privacy legislation enable and provide guidelines for undertaking disclosure, with the purpose of reducing the harm to genetic relatives who, armed with such information, may seek predictive testing themselves. Nevertheless, significant uncertainty remains for health care professionals in the application of the discretion to disclose genetic information to at-risk relatives. First, jurisdictional inconsistencies in privacy legislation present challenges for the provision of genetic services across the country. Second, the current guidelines provide insufficient clarity regarding the justification for disclosure of genetic information to reduce psychological harm to relatives. Third, the implications of a potential expansion of a legal duty of care to inform genetic relatives in some circumstances indicates that such a duty would be unduly burdensome for health care professionals, and suggests that revision of the threshold for use - rather than disclosure - of depersonalised genetic information may represent a pragmatic way forward.Entities:
Keywords: clinical genetics; consent; genetic counselling; genetic information; genetic privacy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31682345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Law Med ISSN: 1320-159X