Personal medicine—the new banking crisis (original) (raw)

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In the version of the article originally published, the citation in Figure 1 was given as ref. 14; it should be ref. 2. In Table 1, CARTaGENE was misspelled, and the descriptions in column 3 of this repository, BioVu's and the International HapMap were incorrect: CARTaGENE should be described as “a repository of socio-demographic, health data and biological samples from 20,000 citizens of the province of Quebec in Canada”; BioVu's description should read “Repository of DNA samples and de-identified health information from the Vanderbilt University Medical Center's electronic system”; and the International HapMap description should read “International collaboration with the ultimate goal of developing a haplotype map of the human genome.” In addition, the amount of the Havasupai settlement was incorrectly stated to be 700million.Itshouldread700 million. It should read 700million.Itshouldread700,000. Finally, the work of Simon et al. (ref. 8). on biobank consent models was incorrectly described. The text should read, “For example, a recent US focus group and survey study found a public that preferred a broad approach to consent over ones involving additional choices. But the preference was marginal, thus noting the lack of consensus on these issues. Indeed, as noted by the authors of the study: '54% of our survey and 42% of our focus group participants could be seen as preferring a control/choice-promoting model (e.g., categorical or study-specific consent) over a control/choice demoting model (e.g., broad consent)8'.” The errors have been corrected in the HTML and pdf versions of the article.

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Acknowledgements

C.T.S. acknowledges support from the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics. T.C. thanks AllerGen (National Centres of Excellence program) the Cancer Stem Cell Consortium and the ICDC, University of Alberta. J.I. and E.B.'s contributions to this paper were enabled by NIH/National Institute of Mental Health R01 no. MH 9R01MH84282, Canadian Institutes of Health Research/Institute of Neurosciences, Mental Health and Addiction no. CNE85117, the British Columbia Knowledge Development Fund and the Canadian Foundation for Innovation. J.I. is a member of the NIH, National Human Genome Research Institute grant no. 2-R01-HG003178.

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. Christopher Thomas Scott is at the Center for Biomedical Ethics, Stanford, California, USA and the National Core for Neuroethics, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.,
    Christopher Thomas Scott
  2. Timothy Caulfield is at the Faculty of Law and School of Public Health, Health Law and Science Policy Group, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.,
    Timothy Caulfield
  3. Emily Borgelt and Judy Illes are at the National Core for Neuroethics, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.,
    Emily Borgelt & Judy Illes

Authors

  1. Christopher Thomas Scott
  2. Timothy Caulfield
  3. Emily Borgelt
  4. Judy Illes

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Correspondence toChristopher Thomas Scott.

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The authors declare no competing financial interests.

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Scott, C., Caulfield, T., Borgelt, E. et al. Personal medicine—the new banking crisis.Nat Biotechnol 30, 141–147 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt.2116

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