Lorena Aparicio - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

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Papers by Lorena Aparicio

Research paper thumbnail of Ethical and legal issues raised by cord blood banking — the challenges of the new bioeconomy

The Medical Journal of Australia, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Biobanking of blood and bone marrow: emerging challenges for custodians of public resources

Journal of law and medicine, 2013

The Australian Bone Marrow Donor Registry (ABMDR) is a publicly funded company that is part of an... more The Australian Bone Marrow Donor Registry (ABMDR) is a publicly funded company that is part of an international network that facilitates unrelated bone marrow transplantation. This role means that the ABMDR has access to a large biospecimen repository therefore making it a highly valuable research resource. Recognising the potential value of these biospecimens for research purposes, the ABMDR is in the process of determining whether, and how, to share its biospecimens with other biobanks. While this would undoubtedly be of value to the scientific community, and ultimately to the wider community, it would also inevitably transform the role of an institution whose primary role is therapeutic, and would compromise the degree of control that a custodian has over donated material. This article describe the challenges confronting the ABMDR, and organisations like it, in balancing their duties to donors, patients, researchers and the general public. These problems have led inevitably to th...

Research paper thumbnail of Ethical and legal issues raised by cord blood banking — the challenges of the new bioeconomy

The Medical Journal of Australia, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Biobanking of blood and bone marrow: emerging challenges for custodians of public resources

Journal of law and medicine, 2013

The Australian Bone Marrow Donor Registry (ABMDR) is a publicly funded company that is part of an... more The Australian Bone Marrow Donor Registry (ABMDR) is a publicly funded company that is part of an international network that facilitates unrelated bone marrow transplantation. This role means that the ABMDR has access to a large biospecimen repository therefore making it a highly valuable research resource. Recognising the potential value of these biospecimens for research purposes, the ABMDR is in the process of determining whether, and how, to share its biospecimens with other biobanks. While this would undoubtedly be of value to the scientific community, and ultimately to the wider community, it would also inevitably transform the role of an institution whose primary role is therapeutic, and would compromise the degree of control that a custodian has over donated material. This article describe the challenges confronting the ABMDR, and organisations like it, in balancing their duties to donors, patients, researchers and the general public. These problems have led inevitably to th...

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