Title: Genetics and Health Care Public Health and Policy Considerations
1Genetics and Health CarePublic Health and
Policy Considerations
- Genomics and Public Policy
- Toronto, Saturday 8 June 2002
2Determinants of Health
Genetic
Genetic Endowment
Biological
Physical
Natural Environment
POPULATIONS
INDIVIDUALS
Political
Social
Structural Environment
Behavioural
Individual Behaviour
3Gene-Environment Interrelationship
GENES
ENVIRONMENT
4Penetrance
Gene (Genotype)
Other Genes
Environment
Genetic Risk
Gene-gene interaction Epigenetics
Gene-environment interaction
Disease Risk
Disease (Phenotype)
PENETRANCE IS THE PROBABILITY OF DEVELOPING THE
DISEASE GIVEN THE POSSESSION OF THE GENE
5Gene-environment Interaction
Heart disease
PKU
Schizophrenia
Cancer
Motor vehicle accident
Cystic fibrosis
Multiple sclerosis
Alzheimers
Diabetes
Fragile X
Asthma
TB
Duchenne muscular dystrophy
Struck by lightning
Obesity
Rheumatoid arthritis
Meningococcus
Autism
Totally Genetic
Totally Environmental
6Nuffield Trust Genetics Scenario Project
To assess the impact of advances in genetics and
molecular biology on the organisation, funding
and provision of clinical services, on changes in
clinical practice, and on the potential for
disease prevention and public health action.
7The Eight Stakeholder Groups
- 1. Pharmaceutical industry
- 2. Physicians, public health physicians
- 3. Social scientists and ethicists
- 4. Policy commentators
- 5. Policy makers within government and the NHS
- 6. Medical geneticists
- 7. Physicians with expertise and experience in
genetics - 8. Patient representatives (GIG)
8General Drivers
- IT
- Telecommunications
- Changing role of the professional
- Globalisation
- Europe
- Environmental sustainability
- Human rights
- Demographic change
9Specific Drivers
- 1. Science and its capacity to improve human
health - 2. Public attitudes towards genetics
10Science and Its Capacity to Improve Human Health
Pace at which genetic science will impact on
health and health services uncertain
- Is the science too complex? Will it be too
expensive? - Can it deliver?
- economic constraints
- scientific constraints
Pace - optimists and realists
11Public Attitudes Towards Genetics
- Widespread misunderstanding about genetics
- genetic determinism
- genetic risk
Role of media and of scientists Legacy of
eugenics Public disquiet about genetic
discrimination
12YES
DESIRED SCENARIO
OPTIMUM SITUATION
PUBLIC ACCEPT
NO
-
YES
SCIENCE DELIVERS
NO
13YES
SCENARIO 1 Science does not deliver
Basic science progresses No proven clinical
benefit
Public eager and accept but science cannot deliver
PUBLIC ACCEPTS
NO
YES
NO
SCIENCE DELIVERS
14YES
SCENARIO 1 Science does not deliver
Stage II Public acceptance declines due to
failure of science to provide benefits
PUBLIC ACCEPTS
NO
YES
SCIENCE DELIVERS
NO
15YES
SCENARIO 2 Public do not accept
PUBLIC ACCEPTS
Science delivers but public do not accept
Luddite views Stop advances in knowledge
NO
YES
SCIENCE DELIVERS
NO
16YES
SCENARIO 2 Public do not accept
PUBLIC ACCEPTS
Stage II Continued demonization of science
destroys science base
NO
NO
SCIENCE DELIVERS
YES
17Six Policy Areas
- 1. Educational strategies
- 2. The regulatory framework
- 3. Financial framework for health
- 4. Information and confidentiality
- 5. Commercial considerations
- 6. The science base
18Educational Strategies
Notion of GENETIC LITERACY Politicians have
responsibility to lead public debate
Education is an interactive process requiring
dialogue and discussion Understanding risk is
crucial New biology is a necessary component of
general education All health professionals will
require education and training Medical
geneticists and genetic counsellors will have a
crucial role
19Genetic Sciences
- 1. Basic concepts of mendelian genetics
- 2. Taking family histories
- 3. Risk assessment and communication
- 4. Principles of genetic epidemiology
- 5. Principles of molecular genetics
- 6. Genetic testing and screening
- 7. Genetics of common disorders
- 8. Gene-environment interaction
20Public Health Sciences
- 1. Epidemiology
- 2. Biostatistics
- 3. Environmental health sciences
- 4. Infectious diseases
- 5. Social and behavioural sciences
- 6. Health economics
- 7. Health services research
- 8. Management science
- 9. Information science
21Social and Political Sciences and the Humanities
- 1. Sociology
- 2. Anthropology
- 3. Law
- 4. Economics
- 5. Ethics
- 6. Epistemology
- 7. Theology
- 8. Political philosophy
22Professonal Competence
THE SCIENCE
PROFESSIONAL COMPETENCE IN GENETICS HEALTH
POLICY
THE ART
23Health Service Provision
- 1. Regional genetic services for patients with
rare genetic disorders - 2. Impact of genetic testing and screening in
common disorders - 3. The impact of pharmacogenetics and new
therapeutic interventions - 4. Opportunities for prediction and prevention
- 5. ELSI issues - consent, confidentiality,
insurance, employment, mental illness,
international trends - 6. Managerial implications
24Diagnostic Potential of Genetic Testing
- 1. Use of genetic tests
- Diagnostic testing
- Predictive (pre-symptomatic) testing
- Susceptibility (pre-disposition) testing
- 2. Validation of genetic tests
- 3. Screening programmes
- 4. Pre-implantation genetic diagnosis
25Novel Therapeutic Implications
- 1. Novel drugs
- 2. Individualised drug therapies
- - pharmacogenetics
- 3. Gene therapy
- 4. Stem cell technologies
- 5. Nuclear transfer technologies
- 6. Xenotransplantation
- 7. Novel vaccines
26Managerial Implications
- 1. Commissioning genetic services
- for regional or national implementation
- mechanisms for validation and prioritisation of
tests and services - 2. Service organisation
- clinical
- laboratory
- 3. Cost pressures
- 4. Human resource and training issues
- medical geneticists, genetic counsellors, public
health professionals, GPs and the primary care
team
27Key Messages (1)
- 1. The new genetics represents the most
significant scientific revolution in the history
of medicine to be faced by government and the NHS - 2. Policy must encourage investment in science
and be supportive of enterprise in the
biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries - 3. We must immediately establish appropriate
educational, training and manpower strategies - 4. Regulatory frameworks must be light enough to
encourage promising scientific developments but
rigorous enough to protect the public
28Key Messages (2)
- 5. Specific issues in relation to the
confidentiality of genetic and personal health
data must be addressed - 6. Policies must be directed at people with
inherited disorders as a first priority in
addition to preparing the service for the impact
of genetic science across all hospital
specialties and within primary care -