Genetic Nondiscrimination Bill Stalled in Senate

by Jordan Yerman | November 18, 2007 at 11:20 am
408 views | 10 Recommendations | 1 comment

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With several private companies launching businesses to provide customers with unprecedented access to their genomes' secrets, legislation protecting people from genetic discrimination is more timely than ever. But Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Oklahama) is single-handedly stalling federal legislation to do just that.

The Senate passed earlier versions of the bill twice before, but they were blocked from coming up for House floor votes. This year, the House passed it by a bipartisan landslide, but Coburn has held up the legislation in the Senate, saying it could place too much strain on businesses.

Wai-wai-wait... Genetic Nondiscrimination Bill? I remember reading about this a few years ago, but it seemed a bit theoretical. One could see that, one day, such legislation would become pertinent.
That day is today, I guess.
The article above mentions three firms that will run a genetic diagnostic, though it isn't (yet) cheap:
23andme, Navigenics, and deCODE.


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BigT
BigT
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 17:18 on November 18th, 2007

jordan, good stuff.

I had never even thought about this before, to tell you the truth, but it does make sense.

We are in a brave new world. 

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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