Title: Ethical issues
1 - Ethical issues
- raised by personalized nutrition
- Ulf Görman
- Ethics
- Lund University, Sweden
2What is nutrigenomics?
- Nutritional genomics is the investigation of the
relation between genes, nutrition and health. - Some of the long-term goals of nutrigenomics are
to improve health conditions and to prevent
disease, such as diabetes, obesity,
cardiovascular diseases and cancer.
3What is personalized nutrition?
- Adjusting personal dietary advice and personal
diet to information collected from genetic tests,
combined with knowledge received from nutritional
genomics - Tailoring your diet to your genes
4Two voices
- Nutrigenomics will take the benefit of the Human
Genome Project and extend it from the hospital to
the home.(Andrew Pollack, New York Times, Oct.
1, 2002) - This treats food like medicine and society like
a hospital. (Getting Personal, Food ethics
council, 2005)
5What is ethics?
- Ethics is the systematic reflection on the moral
aspects of life and its conflicts
6Four widely accepted ethical principles
- AutonomyRespect the right of each individual to
decide about his or her own life - BeneficenceStrive to maximize the welfare of
each individual - Non-maleficenceAvoid, prevent or at least
minimize harm - JusticeStrive for fairness and equity in the
distribution of benefits and burdens(Beauchamp
Childress Principles of biomedical ethics, 5.
Ed., 2001)
7What is health?
- Health is a state of complete physical, mental
and social well-being and not merely the absence
of disease or infirmity.(World Health
Organisation, 1946) - A person is healthy in relation to the extent
that he or she in normal circumstances can
realize vital goals.(Lennart Nordenfelt On the
Nature of Health, 2. ed, 1995)
8What is a good life?
- You reach happiness when you fulfil your wishes.
- But if you cannot fulfil the wishes you have,
then you must adjust your wishes to what you can
achieve.(Epicurus, 3rd century BCE)
9What is a good life?
- Life satisfaction a positive cognitive and
affective response on the part of a subject to
the conditions or circumstances of her life. - Life satisfaction does not depend directly on
the external fulfilment of certain desires or
preferences, but consists instead in the mental
acceptance of how things are.(Wayne Sumner
Welfare, Happiness, and Ethics, 1996)
10 - Western societies today offer exceptional
possibilities for a good life - Hygiene Antibiotics Health care Security
measures Economy Nutritional knowledge
Knowledge about health factors for living
11The unhealthy quest for health
- Focus on the quest for health can be a health
problem in itself, triggered by health propaganda
and alarm reports - Healthism the unhealthy strive for
healthPeople are elevating health to a super
value, a metaphor for all that is good in life.
(Robert Crawford) - Excessive health awareness and expectations
strong focus on health focus on lifestyle
choices use of food supplements concern about
unnatural substances - To be preoccupied with health is unhealthy.
(Geoffrey Rose)
12The unhealthy quest for health
- Medicalization of life (Ivan Illich)Non-medical
, social problems become identified in medical
terms - 10 of the Swedish population medicate
against high blood pressure 5 of the
Swedish population medicate against depression
13Conclusions so far
- Wellbeing is subjective and not directly
dependent on external factors - Health is only one of several aspects of
wellbeing - Health is also to a large extent subjective
- while there are tendencies in modern society
- to identify wellbeing with external
circumstances - to identify wellbeing with health
- to create exaggerated health expectations
14The role of food in human life
- Food is much more than nutrition
- Cultural identity
- Social identity
- Pleasure
- Relationship
- An important aspect of happiness and wellbeing
15Swedish national food administration
- Advice for women during pregnancy
- Eat every day
- Fruit and vegetables at every meal
- Carrots and other root vegetables
- Potatoes, rice or pasta
- Bread preferably several times each day
- Milk or chees preferably at breakfast or as a
light meal - Meat, chicken, fish
- Eat four meals every day
- Breakfast, lunch, a light meal, and dinner
- Eat only small amount of
- Cakes, sweets, candies, snacks etc.
- You need extra iron
- Blood products, peas, whole grain bread to be
consumed together with fruits and vegetables - You need extra calcium
- Milk and cheese
- or cabbage, green beans, shrimps, eggs and
blackberries
- You dont need extra vitamins
- but if you are anxious about vitamins, you can
take one multivitamin pill per day - Fish is good for you, but dont eat these fishes
- more than once a month
- Herring from the Baltic sea
- Wild salmon and trout from lakes or from the
Baltic sea - Avoid completely a number of fishes, including
- Fish from lakes, eel, sword fish, fresh or frozen
tuna, cod liver - Raw shellfish, raw marinated fish, smoked vacuum
packed fish - Avoid
- Liver dishes
- Raw meat
- Soft dessert cheeses like Brie, Camembert,
Vacherol and Livarot - Non-pasteurized milk
- More than 3 cups of coffee per day or 45 cups of
tea - All so called health products
- Dont smoke or drink alcohol during pregnancy
- http//www.slv.se/templates/SLV_Page.aspx?id12212
(2005)
16Why did genetically modified food fail?
- In general, public seems to evaluate new
technologies according to three
variables Usefulness Risk Moral aspects - Public considers GMF to be dangerous, useless,
and morally questionable - Public considers the use of genetic information
in police work to be very good (86,9 )(Lennart
Sjöberg Gene technology in the eyes of the
public and experts, 2004)
17Some aspects of personalized nutrition
- Collection of genetic information
- Counselling
- Creation of special food products
18Collection of genetic information
- General or individually targeted?
- Phenotypic analyses or genetic tests?
- Tests for risk groups or general screening?
- Opportunistic screening?
19General or individual nutritional advice?
- Targeted advice can induce strong motivation
- non-smoking advice 50 compliance vs. 10
for general advice - Phenylketonuria PKU high compliance
- But It is not yet clear whether personalized
nutrition will work in practice
precision? robustness of relation between
genedietdisease? - Depends on frequency of genes in population
- Social and economic factors are much more
important than genetics in explaining diseases
20General or individual nutritional advice?
- Common to find that the burden of ill comes more
from the many with low risks than the few with
high risk. (Rose 1992) - ConclusionsApplication of the principles of
beneficence justicegt favours general
strategies for nutritional advicebut alsogt
individual nutritional advice with clear benefits
for the individual
21Phenotypic analyses or genetic tests?
- In monogenetic disorders, knowledge of the
phenotype is usually sufficient.In complex
polygenetic diseases (diabetes, hypertension),
the predictive value of a genetic test is small
compared to family history or risk factors.This
may change in the future. - Recommendations todayUse phenotypic analyses
whenever adequate less intervention direct
relation to expression of disease - Genetic tests should be preferred, when they can
offer earlier detection, or more precise
diagnosis
22Tests for risk groups or general screening?
- Genetic tests clearly beneficial for persons
belonging to risk groups confirmatory
diagnosis predictive testing - This applies to family health problems as
well as population groups with known genetic
disorders - An example The screening programme among
Eastern (Ashkenazi) Jews.Tay-Sachs disease
reduced by 90 among new-born babies - General screening programmes are only justified
when targeted and the information offered
is clearly beneficial
23Opportunistic screening?
- Different considerations freedom of choice
(respect for autonomy) what values can be
achieved? (beneficence) - Most of those who attend screening examination
are seeking, not the discovery of hidden
troubles, but rather a reassurance that they have
no unusual problems. (Rose) - In the current situation, only very limited
dietary advice can be given on the basis of
genetic tests, and to a large extent on an
experimental basis. (Joost et al, BJN July 2007) - Recommendations Should only be used when they
have a clear advantage Preceded and followed by
adequate information
24How to handle genetic counselling?
- Traditionally, genetic counselling has been
regarded as especially sensitive and personal,
deserving careful treatment in medicine a
task for medical doctors and groups of other
persons with a special training - Tests which are predictive of genetic diseases
or which serve either to identify the subject as
a carrier of a gene responsible for a disease or
to detect a genetic predisposition or
susceptibility to a disease may be performed only
for health purposes or for a scientific research
linked to health purposes and subject to
appropriate genetic counselling. (Oviedo
convention, 1997) - Genetic tests should be considered an integral
part of the health service production. (European
commission, 2004)
25How to handle genetic counselling?
- Does personalized nutrition change this
situation? - Some aspects to take into account Many well
informed health consumers Demand from health
seekers, interested in personal health Interest
from the market to sell genetic tests Risk for
excessive or not well founded marketing - The ethical dilemma for society respect for
autonomy protection of citizens - Recommendations Information and counselling
should be handled on a personal basis by
specially trained persons Marketing of genetic
tests directly sold to the public should be
discouraged
26Concerns about commercialisation
- It is inevitable that knowledge in
nutrigenomics will come into commercial use.
Commercialisation is the way for new technology
to reach the public. - But Commercial marketing may have a tendency
to create exaggerated hopes. Commercial
marketing may have a tendency to apply specific
products to a wider group of consumers than it
was created for. Normal healthy food may be
overlooked. - Little money can be made by selling the fresh
fruits and vegetables that form the mainstay of
healthy eating advice." (Food ethics council,
2005)
27Will PN contribute to a good life?
- Unavoidable and natural decline of health can
be redefined as health problems that can be
successfully avoided, cured or mitigated - But an exaggerated focus on health can also be a
threat to a good life
28The main ethical concerns for PN
- AutonomyThe rights and integrity of each
individual should be supported in connection with
the use of PN - BeneficencePN should be used in order to
contribute to a good life in line with the values
of each person involved - Non-maleficencePN should be used so as to avoid
or minimize harm - JusticeThe benefits of PN should be fairly
distributed