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How Much Control Do Children and Adolescents Have over Genomic Testing, Parental Access to Their Results, and Parental Communication of Those Results to Others?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2021
Extract
Both researchers and clinicians are increasingly offering genomic testing for children and adolescents, a practice which parents have generally endorsed in numerous studies. By contrast, much less effort has been devoted to understanding what minors think about genetic and genomic testing. While a small number of investigators have shown that minors with or at risk for cancer generally concur with their parents and favor testing, other studies reveal that minors are less willing to participate in genomics research. Regardless, genetic and genomic testing of minors raises of host of potential legal questions. Key issues are: (1) To what extent can minors obtain genomic tests without involvement of parents or guardians? (2) To what extent can minors refuse genomic testing? and (3) To what extent can minors obtain their own results, keep their parents from getting access to them, and limit what their parents do with their genomic test results? While a number of authors have written about legal issues in genetic testing of minors, remarkably little has been written about the legal protections of minors’ choices about genomic analysis and return of results.
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- Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 2015
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