Targeting Representation: Interpreting Calls for Diversity in Precision Medicine Research

被引:0
作者
Lee, Sandra Soo-Jin [1 ]
Fullerton, Stephanie M. [2 ]
McMahon, Caitlin E. [1 ]
Bentz, Michael [1 ]
Saperstein, Aliya [3 ]
Jeske, Melanie [4 ]
Vasquez, Emily [5 ]
Foti, Nicole [4 ]
Saco, Larissa [6 ]
Shim, Janet K. [4 ]
机构
[1] Columbia Univ, Dept Med Humanities & Eth, Div Eth, New York, NY USA
[2] Univ Washington, Sch Med, Dept Bioeth & Humanities, Seattle, WA USA
[3] Stanford Univ, Dept Sociol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[4] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Social & Behav Sci, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[5] Univ Illinois, Dept Sociol, Chicago, IL 60680 USA
[6] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Sociol, Davis, CA 95616 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
diversity; precision medicine research; bioethics; SOCIAL-JUSTICE; RACE; INCLUSION; GENOMICS;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Scientists have identified a "diversity gap" in genetic samples and health data, which have been drawn predominantly from individuals of European ancestry, as posing an existential threat to the promise of precision medicine. Inadequate inclusion as articulated by scientists, policymakers, and ethicists has prompted large-scale initiatives aimed at recruiting populations historically underrepresented in biomedical research. Despite explicit calls to increase diversity, the meaning of diversity - which dimensions matter for what outcomes and why - remain strikingly imprecise. Drawing on our document review and qualitative data from observations and interviews of funders and research teams involved in five precision medicine research (PMR) projects, we note that calls for increasing diversity often focus on "representation" as the goal of recruitment. The language of representation is used flexibly to refer to two objectives: achieving sufficient genetic variation across populations and including historically disenfranchised groups in research. We argue that these dual understandings of representation are more than rhetorical slippage, but rather allow for the contemporary collection of samples and data from marginalized populations to stand in as correcting historical exclusion of social groups towards addressing health inequity. We trace the unresolved historical debates over how and to what extent researchers should procure diversity in PMR and how they contributed to ongoing uncertainty about what axes of diversity matter and why. We argue that ambiguity in the meaning of representation at the outset of a study contributes to a lack of clear conceptualization of diversity downstream throughout subsequent phases of the study.
引用
收藏
页码:317 / 326
页数:10
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