Brunelli Luca, Chan Kee, Tabery James, Binford Warren, Brower Amy
Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine, University of Utah.
American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics.
Med Res Arch. 2024 Mar;12(3). doi: 10.18103/mra.v12i3.5167. Epub 2024 Mar 26.
The year 2023 marked the 60 anniversary of screening newborns in the United States for diseases that benefit from early identification and intervention. All around the world, the goal of NBS is to facilitate timely diagnosis and management to improve individual health outcomes in all newborns regardless of their place of birth, economic circumstances, ability to pay for treatment, and access to healthcare. Advances in technology to screen and treat disease have led to a rapid increase in the number of screened conditions, and innovations in genomics are expected to exponentially expand this number further. A system where all newborns are screened, coupled with rapid technological innovation, provides a unique opportunity to improve pediatric health outcomes and advance children's rights, including the unique rights of sick and disabled children. This is especially timely as we approach the 100 anniversary of the 1924 Geneva Declaration of the Rights of the Child, which includes children's right to healthcare, and the 1989 United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child that expanded upon this aspect and affirmed each child's right to the highest attainable standard of health. In this manuscript, we provide background on the evolving recognition of the rights of children and the foundational rights to healthcare and non-discrimination, provide two examples that highlight issues to access and equity in newborn screening that may limit a child's right to healthcare and best possible outcomes, detail ways the current approach to newborn screening advances the rights of the child, and finally, propose that the incorporation of genomics into newborn screening presents a useful case study to recognize and uphold the rights of every child.
2023年是美国开展新生儿疾病筛查60周年,这些疾病可通过早期识别和干预受益。在世界各地,新生儿筛查的目标是促进及时诊断和管理,以改善所有新生儿的个体健康结果,无论其出生地、经济状况、支付治疗费用的能力以及获得医疗保健的机会如何。筛查和治疗疾病的技术进步导致筛查疾病的数量迅速增加,基因组学的创新预计将使这一数字进一步呈指数级增长。一个对所有新生儿进行筛查的系统,再加上快速的技术创新,为改善儿童健康结果和推进儿童权利,包括患病和残疾儿童的独特权利,提供了一个独特的机会。这尤其及时,因为我们即将迎来1924年《日内瓦儿童权利宣言》发表100周年,该宣言包括儿童获得医疗保健的权利,以及1989年《联合国儿童权利公约》,该公约在此基础上进行了扩展,并确认每个儿童都有权享有能达到的最高健康标准。在本手稿中,我们提供了关于儿童权利的不断演变的认识以及医疗保健和不歧视的基本权利的背景,提供了两个例子,突出了新生儿筛查中可能限制儿童获得医疗保健权利和最佳可能结果的获取和公平问题,详细阐述了当前新生儿筛查方法推进儿童权利的方式,最后,提出将基因组学纳入新生儿筛查是一个有用的案例研究,以承认和维护每个儿童的权利。