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1227.1 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | Trust God | Tue Dec 31 1991 15:17 | 133 |
| I posted this in =wn=. This is a scary topic for me.
Karen
<<< IKE22::NOTE$:[NOTES$LIBRARY]WOMANNOTES-V4.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Topics of Interest to Women >-
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Note 160.0 Discrimination through Genetics? 14 replies
RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA "Let Go for the Moment" 123 lines 11-DEC-1991 18:07
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Taken from the 12/91 issue of Scientific American. Copied without
permission.
FATAL FLAW - Who will have the right to examine your genes?
A graduate of a police academy in the Midwest was about to be hired as a
policeman when it became known he had a family history of Huntington's
chorea, an incurable disorder that causes physical and mental
degeneration in middle age. The man was told he would have to be tested
for the gene causing the disease before he could be hired.
Such testing by employers and insurance companies is not yet common, but
new genetic discoveries that make it possible are being reported almost
weekly. Researchers are rapidly expanding the list of specific genes
carried by many healthy people that are statistically linked to an
increased risk of acquiring one or another disease, including many
cancers and other disorders not normally thought of as genetically
based.
One current target for investigators is an inherited form of breast
cancer that will develop in about one in 170 women before they reach the
age of 50. According to Mary Claire King, a researcher at the
University of California at Berkeley, that statistic makes inherited
breast cancer more common than such well-known diseases as cystic
fibrosis and muscular dystrophy. By analyzing the genetic constitution
of afflicted women, King is rapidly winnowing down the shortlist of
genes that might transmit a tendency to acquire the malignancy. When
King or some other researcher succeeds, developing an easy-to-use test
will be relatively simple.
King, who described her latest results in October at the 8th
International Congress of Human Genetics in Washington, D.C., hopes her
research will lead to ways to diagnose breast cancer at an early stage,
when it is more easily treated. Knowing the nature of the genetic
changes that occur in cancerous cells might, she points out, make it
possible to develop a blood test that would betray the presence of a
tumor too small to be seen.
Early treatment is better treatment, and many of the scores of recent
discoveries in human genetics can be expected to benefit patients as care
improves. Candidate genes for predispositions to Alzheimer's disease,
colon cancer, liver cancer and some forms of arthritis have all recently
been found. Carrier and prenatal genetic screening has already led to a
dramatic drop in the number of babies born with severe genetic disorders,
such as Tay-Sachs disease and beta thalassemia.
But as more tests become available, their use as a screening tool is
likely to increase. According to a survey conducted by the congressional
Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) and released in October, only 12
our of 330 Fortune 500 companies reported in 1989 that they were
conducting genetic monitoring or screening, either for the benefit of
the employee or the employer. More than 40 percent of the companies
admitted that the potential cost of insuring an otherwise healthy job
applicant would affect his or her chances of being hired.
The main reason genetic screening is not more common, the OTA survey
implies, is that personnel officers believe the tests now available are not
cost-effective. Insurance companies, for their part, argue they should
have access to any genetic information that those insured have access
to, in order to prevent people who know they are at an increased risk of
illness or death from buying excess coverage. "There are already many
examples of people who either have been denied insurance coverage or have
had benefits limited because of dependents with genetic disorders,"
observes Paul R. Billings, a medical geneticist at California Pacific
Medical Center in San Francisco.
Arguments over who should have access to information are not new. In
the 1970s blacks in many states were screened against their will for the
sickle cell trait, and some of those who refused to be tested were
charged higher insurance rates. Many people who have a family history
of Huntington's disease decline to be tested for the Huntington gene for
fear that health and life insurance companies as well as employers might
discriminate against them. Another issue is whether patients' relatives
should be given test results.
Laws to prevent the abuse of genetic information are on the books in
eight states, points out Philip R. Reilly, executive director of the
Eunice Kennedy Shriver Center for Mental Retardation in Waltham, Mass.
The Human Genome Project, the international effort to map and sequence
the entire human genome, is often cited as a reason for enacting
protective legislation. Wisconsin, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania and Texas
are all debating measures to prevent misuse of genetic data, and
commissions in several European countries have recommended legislation
that would deny insurance companies access to genetic information.
By 1995, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 will restrict
preemployment medical examinations so that they can be used to determine
only an applicant's ability to do the job. But it will not affect
insurers. "We may see increasing pressure to avoid the birth of
children who will be costly to insure," says Neil A. Holtzman, a
professor of pediatrics at Johns Hopkins Univeristy.
State assemblyman Lloyd G. Connelly of California recently sponsored a
bill that would have prevented employers and insurers from
discriminating on the basis of "genetic characteristic" associated with a
risk of disease. Although the states's insurance industry dropped its
opposition, the California Manufacturers Association fought the bill to
the end. Governor Pete Wilson vetoed it in October, saying he feared it
would impose an undue burden on employers.
A subcommittee of the House of Representatives recently devoted a day of
hearings to uses and misuses of genetic information and also examined the
proposed Human Genome Privacy Act, introduced by Representative John
Conyers, Jr., of Michigan. The bill extends the right of privacy to
cover genetic information. Modeled on consumer credit laws, it would
prevent genetic information about an individual from being made
available to third parties without the person's consent. It would also
give individuals the right to correct their records.
That is not protection enough, says Dorothy C. Werz, a medical
sociologist at the Shriver Center. "The bill says almost anyone can have
access to genetic information with the patient's consent, and one can
coerce consent," Wertz asserts. "It won't protect most people."
Some see the increasing availability of genetic testing - which reveals
ever more differences between people - as posing a fundamental challenge
to private insurance, which operates by pooling risk. "There are 37
million people in this country who are uninsured or underinsured,"
Billings notes. "Our system is geared to excluding people who will get
sick. Until there is a fix, predictive genetic tests that identify
presymptomatic people will make this situation worse."
-Tim Beardsley
|
1227.2 | It's coming!!! | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Wed Jan 01 1992 22:58 | 30 |
| The human species will become extinct when the population of lawyers
reaches a certain proportion. Before that happens, however, lawyers
will implement the sort of genetic selection raised in the basenote,
when THE ATTORNEYS START REPRESENTING CHILDREN SUING THEIR PARENTS FOR
PASSING ALONG BAD GENES! "The plaintiff holds, your honor, that the
defendents, his parents, did pass along genes which materially reduce
his quality of life and life expectancy. The plaintiff seeks damages..."
In science fiction novels, genetic screening is mandated by the
government when population pressure is so great that there is great
public support for extreme measures. I think we will be confronting
this shortly in our society, as health care costs continue to climb
through the ceiling. Someday giving birth to crack babies will be a
crime punishable by sterilization. We cannot afford to spend $200,000
in the first year of life for a crack baby, and let Mom go out and do
it again (a Globe article a few weeks ago described a woman who'd
delivered her third crack-addict baby).
At present, we do genetic selection, when couples with one infertile
partner seek germ from a third party. Sperm banks carefully screen for
genetically-based diseases; many recruit from medical students. Donor
egg programs are similar.
In our plastic, TV-dominated society, where millions of Americans spend
several hours per day watching to genetically-perfect (i.e. beautiful)
stars on their televisions... I think there would be a very large
market among the less-than-perfect. "Want your kids to look like <name
the latest media idol>? Send $999.95 and a thermic SASE to SuperGermCo!"
Mucho dinero, and in 2003 half the kindergarteners will look like the
star of the biggest grossing movie of 1997!
|
1227.3 | "He who pays the piper picks the tune" | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Jan 02 1992 11:27 | 44 |
| Less fantasically, there's the old rule that he who pays gets to call
the tune. If we (technically-advanced countries) decide that our
medical costs will be paid by our governments (i.e. via taxes), then
our governments will wind up making choices based on its own utility,
not on our own individual utilities. Genetic testing and restrictions
and privileges based on genes follow naturally from this cost-based
mindset.
It means that more money will be spend on things like prenatal care,
and less on things like organ transplants--there's a bigger payoff in
terms of years of improved life for the population as a whole. It also
means arranging things so that low-payoff stuff doesn't get done at all
(probably via long waiting lists). This means that the government
will want to know your genetic weaknesses where it is economically
effective for it to base your care on that knowledge.
I also suspect we'll see real euthanasia in the next few decades: not
just competent sick people saying "Don't feed me" as we have now, but
the deliberate killing of those who are unlikely to get better and are
a burden and aren't competent enough to say "Don't kill me" loudly
and strongly and often. Again, it's an economic decision which makes
sense if medical care is funded as a whole for the entire population
of a country. Here also the killing may not take a direct form
(e.g. an overdose of morphine, which might be relatively humane), but
will likely be indirect, to avoid guilt (e.g. the chronically ill can
be moved to distant hospitals which are unfortunately understaffed and
undersupplied and crowded and have high death rates, but the workers
at those hosptials do really try to keep people alive: it's the lack
of money for equipment and drugs which kills them (note: this is how
orphanages and poorhouses used to work in the Ebenezer Scrooge days)).
Public health does not mean public funding of the health care which
individuals would buy for themselves, at least not in the long run.
It means the public funding of health care which most benefits the
public in general--that is, it is the care you would buy for a crowd
of strangers.
Now, I don't think this will take the form of blunt denials of service.
It just means the HMO-izing of all medicine: lots of screening, long
waits, difficulty of access to specialists, postponements and
treatement reductions: medicine brought to you by the Motor Vehicle
Department.
-John Bishop
|
1227.4 | Evolution has ceased. | BREAKR::HA | | Fri Jan 03 1992 01:35 | 12 |
| For an alternative perspective, one could consider that gene therapy,
aborting fetuses with unwanted genes, life preserving machines, etc.
are all acting to stop evolution. I contend that evolution for the
human race has essentially stopped. We have stopped it in favor of the
advantages of a society - that is we all live better because, for the
most part, we try to build things and help each other. Of course, I
think we may be too smart for own good because we will eventually
overpopulate and pollute ourselves to extinction and then the other
species of the earth will get a chance at evolving...
|
1227.5 | DEVO had it right: DEVOlution! | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Fri Jan 03 1992 06:10 | 13 |
| Actually, we're devolving: the rate of reproduction is inversely
related to socio-economic status in Western countries, e.g. more
intelligence correlates with fewer children. You could argue that the
criminal slaughter in our inner cities is selecting out those most
disposed to violence, except so many of the dead are bystanders, and
the chances are the dead 16-year-old has an illegitimate child or
three, particularly if he was effective in the drug trade. Now we have
the trend of ambitious professionals wanting to be especially prepared
to support their children, and _whoops_ they're past the child-bearing
age. The Pill has reversed the old rule. These days, if you are
responsible and competent, then you are LESS likely to reproduce. In
other times and places, the dowry or "bride price" introduced a bias in
FAVOR of the economically capable.
|
1227.6 | | CSC32::S_HALL | Gol-lee Bob Howdy, Vern! | Fri Jan 03 1992 14:11 | 35 |
|
Naaaahh. You guys are only looking at the Luddite,
doom-and-gloom side.
Chances are, it'll be used to good effect. Instead of
children suing their parents, more likely, the parents will
be able (using some sort of gene map) to pick the best
that their genes can offer. They'll edit out that recessive
for myopia, or the bad teeth that were in the family for
generations. They'll eliminate that breast cancer
tendency that got all the women in the family.
Folks, this IS evolution. It can lead to a hardier
humankind. It's just controlled by directed thought and
application of science, not cosmic-ray-induced mutation.
For an interesting, human look at a possible future where
man has control of his gene pool, look at Robert Heinlein's
book, "Beyond This Horizon".
The protagonist is the result of a "superior" gene matchup.
He is very smart, very fast, etc., yet he is neither Nazi
nor nebbish. An interesting note in the story is the society's
use of "control naturals." These are people who are born
without any embryonic gene-splicing techniques used. They
are therefore like us: prone to balding, colds, myopia, tooth
decay, etc. The society pays them a handsome dividend for
their not being born "normal." The control factor is deemed
important, as this is, after all, science.
Nice, entertaining book, and it may change your outlook on
the possibilities of this technology.
Steve H
|
1227.7 | money <> intelligence! | OCCURS::SWALKER | Gravity: it's the law | Fri Jan 03 1992 15:24 | 31 |
|
re: .5 (Hoyt)
> Actually, we're devolving: the rate of reproduction is inversely
> related to socio-economic status in Western countries, e.g. more
> intelligence correlates with fewer children.
> Now we have
> the trend of ambitious professionals wanting to be especially prepared
> to support their children, and _whoops_ they're past the child-bearing
> age. The Pill has reversed the old rule. These days, if you are
> responsible and competent, then you are LESS likely to reproduce. In
> other times and places, the dowry or "bride price" introduced a bias in
> FAVOR of the economically capable.
Hoyt, I can only conclude that you believe that socio-economic
status is necessarily correlated with superior intelligence and
all-round superior genetics, and that traits like responsibility
and competence can be inherited.
Sounds like classism to me. Need I remind you that Martin
Luther King was descended from slaves, or that the Russian royal
family, while economically strong, had certain genetic disadvantages?
A lot of things in this world are for sale. Good genes are not
among them. I don't believe that the smartest and most capable
people necessarily end up with more money, either... or that there
are more of them in Western countries.
Sharon
|
1227.8 | Classism is the opposite of racism | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Fri Jan 03 1992 19:48 | 45 |
| "Correlation" describes a statistical phenomenon, a description of a
tendency within a group. It is not deterministic. The experience of a
single individual (e.g. MLK) does not invalidate the observation.
In any event, MLK was the product of an educated, successful family.
That his antecedents were slaves is irrelevant, unless you're putting
forward the thesis that slaves were genetically inferior. I'd argue
just the opposite: only the best survived the horrible conditions of
their cross-Atlantic voyage and life as plantation slaves. Stating that
slavery made blacks inferior is like stating that someone sent to
prison suddenly acquires inferior genes: slavery was imposed on the
slaves, and the imposition didn't diminish the quality of their genes.
Re classism: Surprise - it's a classist world. The U.S. is one of the
_least_ classist societies, with much more intergenerational movement
between classes than most cultures. Educational and entreprenurial
opportunities enable the low to raise themselves high. Most other
cultures impose severe limits upon those born to the wrong class,
caste, family, race, gender, religion, etc.
Even in the U.S., though, there is a strong correlation between
parents' socioeconomic status and that of their children. If you don't
believe it, spend five minutes with an Intro. to Sociology text. If the
idea that genes matter offends you, then enjoy yourself at the other
end of the nature-nurture argument. I could care less about the
mechanics; the fact remains that intelligence, achievement, etc. is
_somehow_ passed to successive generations. Smart people get their PhDs
proving such things, and most of 'em had high SES parents ;).
It's my perception that the U.S. is getting _more_ classist. In the
late 40's, millions of veterans went to college on the GI bill. In the
60's, grants and loans and lower college costs put college within the
reach of most. Now sky-high tuition and the sparcity of grants/loans
make college much more the domain of the well-off. Wealth is
increasingly concentrated in fewer hands. The manufacturing jobs which
used to elevate high school grads to the middle-class have fled to the
Pacific rim. Elections are now the province of pollsters and ad execs,
as the voters get all their political information from the evil eye of
television. The cost of TV ads means we get the best leaders money can
buy.
I think the U.S. became a great country in large part because it
allowed those who came to these shores to reap rewards according to
their talents. We all benefitted. I'm sorry the opportunity is going
away.
|
1227.9 | | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | back by popular demand | Sat Jan 04 1992 13:42 | 7 |
|
.0> Could we be approaching a time when a new super race mentality will appear?
No.
Such a conclusion requires a pretty wild imagination and a good
amount of speculation.
|
1227.10 | Are long sentences a sign of defective genes? | KARHU::TURNER | | Mon Jan 06 1992 09:49 | 33 |
| re -.1
Apparently you intended "wild imagination" as an insult. I don't
think you have paid much attention to developments in genetics.
The original super race ideology grew out of social darwinism.
German leadership bought into this before wwI. They believed that
political and military superiority were outward signs of innate
superiority. The fantasy of Arian superiority permeated social thinking
even in the USA. The bias against other races is very blatent in
Anthropological texts from the first half of this century.
One of the social consequences of WWII was a swing away from this
racial jingoism to the point where it is suicidal to even suggest that
some population may be genetically inferior.
The old basis for racial superiority has been thoroughly
repudiated. However, as genetic knowledge increases, it is becoming
increasingly clear that far more people are affected by genetic defects
than we were able to prove in the past. For example, I have a textbook
in my library dating from the early 60's. It cites perhaps a hundred
examples of known genetically transmitted defects. A geneticist of that
period might suspect many others without being able to supply more than
ancdotal evidence. The situation is very different today with more and
more marginal defects coming to light.
I don't think it is wild to extrapolate to a situation where it is
possible to prove that a significant number of people are passing on
defective genes.
As others have pointed out there is great resistance to
discriminating against individuals. I don't think we could return to
the blatent discrimination of Nazism, but we could easily find
ourselves in a situation where there was extreme pressure to not reproduce
defects.
johN
|
1227.11 | Could we be trusted? | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Happily excited, bright, attractive | Mon Jan 06 1992 10:13 | 16 |
| In China they are experiencing a population explosion. To combat this
they are limiting the number of children a couple may have. Since male
children are much desired and female children regarded as a dismal
failure, many female children are quietly killed as newborn infants.
They are then reported as stillborn and the couple can try again.
Consider the effect of giving the average person in China the ability
to ensure the gender of any baby. Well at least it would solve their
population explosion.
Now what would we in the west do to our offspring. Well if names are
any guide we would see fashion taking a big part in it. For example
most of the baby girls in England born after Diana's wedding would grow
up to look like her. Heaven alone knows what would happen in America.
Jamie.
|
1227.12 | Everyone has a genetic defect of some type | LJOHUB::GODIN | PC Centric: The Natural Order | Mon Jan 06 1992 11:58 | 7 |
| Much of the problem (or challenge, depending on your viewpoint) is
determining what is a genetic "defect" and what is a genetic
"difference."
Can we be trusted? Probably not, if history teaches us anything.
Karen
|
1227.13 | Good genetics isn't Hollywood genetics | KARHU::TURNER | | Mon Jan 06 1992 17:32 | 19 |
| A genetic defect is a gene that either doesn't function as it should or
functions poorly. For example an enzyme deficiency resulting in say
obesity or acne due to poor handling of fatty acids would probably be a
defect. A gene that correlated with better nutrient absorption and a
resulting tendency to obesity would not be a defect.
Genes that cause dark skin or light skin aren't defects. They are
adaptations to environmental conditions, providing survival benefit.
Problems arise when genes show both positive and negative effects.
For example, the gene that causes sickle cell anemia when two copies
are inherited provides increased resistance to malaria when only one
copy is present.
Unless some type of cloning procedure comes into vogue where people
choose designer embryos, a plethora of Dianas is unlikely. This is
actually a variant of the old master race views and should be medically
unethical if not socially unacceptable.
johN
|
1227.14 | | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | hey! let go o'my ears! | Mon Jan 06 1992 21:50 | 13 |
| .10> Apparently you intended "wild imagination" as an insult. I don't
.10> think you have paid much attention to developments in genetics.
That wasn't an insult at all. For what you propose to happen,
would require the takeover of the medical community by some
group of evildoers.
Genetic testing is not simple, and gene splicing is a very
specific, delicate, complicated procedure. Not something that
can be pulled off with simple brute force.
That's why I say a wild imagination is necessary - because the
series of events necessary is simply incredible, in my opinion.
|
1227.15 | opinions | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Fri Jan 10 1992 10:31 | 23 |
| Some general comments.
1) Zarlenga is right, controlling this technology is not simple enough
for simple-minded bureaucrats and bigots to exploit easily.
2) The long term effects of parental choice will not lead to just one
or a few standard types. Cultural values are different enough that
Diana would be beautiful only in a few societies. Actually, we could
reverse the homgenization that has come along with easy mobility, just
by giving parents the opportunity to emphasize those genetic traits
they value. (Or do you think that everyone prefers WASP's?)
3) The greatest danger to evolution is not genetic manipulation but
good public health and reduction of performance standards in the name
of "redressing ancient racial wrongs". Evolution proceeds when there
are great challenges and high failure rates, not when every problem is
solved without individual effort.
4) The result will not be a disaster nor a paradise. We humans are
capable of both creative problem solving and destructive problem
creation.
Dick
|