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Genetics Unzipped – When genetic testing reveals hidden family secrets

Posted by , on 16 January 2020

Two sad women
What happens when an innocent genetic test reveals hidden secrets?

It’s been impossible to ignore the rise in direct-to-consumer and medical genetic testing over the past few years. And as the cost of whole genome sequencing falls – and the potential personal, health and financial value of genomic data rises – this trend is only likely to continue.

But do people really realise what they’re signing up for when they spit into a tube or squirt out a blood sample?

As we head into the next decade, ethical issues like informed consent and privacy for genomic testing and research are becoming impossible to ignore – especially as your genetic information doesn’t just belong to you but is also shared with your blood relatives. 

When Jack Nunn started doing a PhD at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia, looking at how to involve people in genomics research, the most obvious place to start was with his own family. But he could never have predicted the secret that would be revealed once they started looking into their genes.

We also speak with ethics research and genetic counsellor Anna Middleton, to find out more about the ethical issues around the fast-changing field of consumer and medical genomics. 

Listen now through the player below, or subscribe from Apple podcasts/iTunes, Spotify and all good podcast apps to make sure you get the latest episodes and catch up on our back catalogue.

If you enjoy the show, please do rate and review on Apple podcasts and help to spread the word on social media. And you can always send feedback and suggestions for future episodes and guests to podcast@geneticsunzipped.com Follow us on Twitter – @geneticsunzip
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