Burgess M M
Office of Medical Bioethics, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Clin Biochem. 1994 Apr;27(2):87-91. doi: 10.1016/0009-9120(94)90017-5.
Many ethical concerns raised by prenatal testing are based on the use and effects of genetic information in nonclinical contexts. Correct or incorrect beliefs about social uses of genetic information may limit the voluntariness of informed consent to prenatal testing. A qualitative study of persons predictively tested for Huntington's disease illustrates how the social context, in this case the family history of being at risk, affects the interpretation of the genetic information and alters relationships. This constitutes a risk of genetic testing. Prenatal testing also requires ethical analysis based on careful understanding of how social attitudes and nonclinical uses affect voluntariness and potential harm and benefits of testing. Investigators conducting research on prenatal tests share the responsibility to evaluate social attitudes toward at-risk persons, nonclinical uses of genetic information, and the social benefits and harm of such uses.
产前检测引发的许多伦理问题都基于基因信息在非临床环境中的使用和影响。对基因信息社会用途的正确或错误认知可能会限制产前检测知情同意的自愿性。一项对亨廷顿舞蹈症预测性检测者的定性研究表明,社会环境,在这种情况下即处于患病风险的家族病史,是如何影响基因信息的解读并改变人际关系的。这构成了基因检测的一种风险。产前检测还需要基于对社会态度和非临床用途如何影响检测的自愿性以及潜在危害和益处的仔细理解进行伦理分析。开展产前检测研究的调查人员有责任评估社会对高危人群的态度、基因信息的非临床用途以及此类用途的社会利弊。