Mikami Koichi
Faculty of Science and Technology, Keio University, Kanagawa, Japan.
New Genet Soc. 2020 Mar 6;39(2):148-172. doi: 10.1080/14636778.2019.1693889. eCollection 2020.
Social scientists have observed previously that patient support groups began to have significant influence over both research and clinical services of medical genetics in the early 2000s. This observation led to the idea of genetic citizenship, suggesting that the active participation and intervention of patient support groups in the rapidly growing field of medicine marked the emergence of a new form of citizenship. To understand how this citizenship emerged, this paper examines the development of umbrella organizations of genetic support groups in the USA and the UK. The historical analysis demonstrates that the ways in which these organizations developed differ considerably, and that their visions and activities reflected the different structural and cultural organizations of medical genetics in their respective countries. By recognizing the early work of these organizations as citizenship projects, this article argues that they helped rather different forms of genetic citizenship to emerge in the two countries.
社会科学家此前观察到,患者支持团体在21世纪初开始对医学遗传学的研究和临床服务产生重大影响。这一观察结果引发了基因公民身份的概念,表明患者支持团体在迅速发展的医学领域中的积极参与和干预标志着一种新的公民身份形式的出现。为了理解这种公民身份是如何出现的,本文考察了美国和英国基因支持团体伞状组织的发展情况。历史分析表明,这些组织的发展方式有很大差异,而且它们的愿景和活动反映了各自国家医学遗传学不同的结构和文化组织。通过将这些组织的早期工作视为公民身份项目,本文认为它们有助于在两国出现截然不同的基因公民身份形式。