| Literature DB >> 32477408 |
Justin Reedy1, Jessica W Blanchard2, Justin Lund2, Paul G Spicer2, Christie Byars3, Michael Peercy3, Bobby Saunkeah3, Erika Blacksher4.
Abstract
Amid the rapid growth of precision medicine and biobanking initiatives, there have been few efforts at cataloging the implications of these initiatives for Indigenous communities. A consortium involving a university and three American Indian/Alaska Native (AIAN) community partners is working to promote deliberation and dialog in AIAN communities about the potential benefits and risks of genomic research for those communities. The first of the consortium's three planned deliberations was held in September 2018 with citizens of the Chickasaw Nation, a federally recognized tribe in south-central Oklahoma with a full-service medical center and growing research capacity and oversight. Consortium members and the Chickasaw Nation Department of Health Administration designed a deliberative forum for Chickasaw citizens to consider the potential benefits and risks of participating in genomic research and biobanks. In this manuscript, we describe the deliberative method used in this event and report on the ideas discussed during the tribal citizens' deliberations. Chickasaw citizens identified many risks and benefits associated with genomic research and biobanks, including the potential for medical advancements that might benefit the Chickasaw community as well as the possibility of discrimination against the Chickasaw people. Although participants thought the potential benefits outweighed the potential risks, that moral calculation was contingent on whether control of the research and biobanks rested with Chickasaw leadership, researchers, and citizens.Entities:
Keywords: biobanks; community-based participatory research; deliberation; genomics; indigenous peoples
Year: 2020 PMID: 32477408 PMCID: PMC7240027 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2020.00466
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
FIGURE 1Schematic for deliberation process.
Considerations for weighing the potential risks and benefits of tribal participation in genomic research.
| Data control | Who will control the data? Where will it be stored, will it be secure, and will personal privacy and identity be protected? |
| Data sharing | Who has access to the information? |
| Benefits of research | Is the research relevant to Native people, will it have a measurable positive impact on Native health outcomes, and will Native people have access (e.g., cost, geography) to the treatments or prevention strategies that might result from the research? |
| Necessity of research | Is genetic research necessary to address the condition/disease being studied? |
| Misuse of genetic information | Could it be used to discriminate against individuals (e.g., insurance or employment) or against Chickasaw people (stigmatization of entire group), or against humanity? |
| Immoral uses of genetic research | Could it be used to alter biological life (human and non-human) in ways that transgress moral boundaries or “play God”? |
Considerations for weighing the potential risks and benefits of tribal participation in biobanks.
| Consent | How would consent for use of data be handled? Would the individual have the opportunity to be informed about and consent to each new use? Would tribal review of secondary uses provide adequate protection? Would an approach to consent other than individual or tribal consent provide adequate protections (e.g., based on type of research or disease)? |
| Data sharing | Who decides who has access to the information and which researchers will be given access? |
| Long-term storage | Why do data need to be stored long-term? Would long-term storage increase the risk of misuse? |
| Privacy | Will individual privacy and confidentiality be secured and protected against misuse (e.g., discrimination in employment or health/life insurance)? |
| Cost/opportunity costs | How much would it cost to build, maintain, and secure a Chickasaw biobank? Would these costs distract from other worthy investments in Chickasaw people and programs? |
| Psychological burdens | Would genetic information about self or family cause psychological harms (e.g., distress, fear, anger, and sadness)? |
| Health benefits | Will research provide more knowledge about Chickasaw health and disease (particularly high rates of diabetes) and yield better treatments and prevention strategies? Will the research provide benefits to society at large? |
| Opportunities for advancement of Chickasaw Nation | Biobanks may provide opportunities to build infrastructure and capacity, create jobs and bring leading Chickasaw researchers back home to the region, advance ground-breaking research, and alleviate mistrust. |