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Genome Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues
Section
DOE Human Genome Program Contractor-Grantee Workshop
VII
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Henry T. Greely, Barbara A. Koenig, and Laura L. McConnell Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, Stanford Law School, Stanford, CA 94305-8610 hgreely@stanford.edu This grant partially supported a process that led to a conference at Stanford on October 17, 1998 on the implications of the increasing use of genetic variation in medicine. Scientists, physicians, and industry increasingly are recognizing the potential medical importance of such variation. The genetic variation involved can be that of a pathogen, a tumor, or healthy human tissue; the medical implications may be in prevention, treatment, or prognosis. In all these respects, the potential for applying individualized genomic information to medicine is an extension of existing knowledge based on the growing availability of inexpensive and convenient determination of what DNA sequence in known genes. Among the specific topics examined were |
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