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PRESS RELEASES
Wednesday, April 30, 2003
MN House Adds Informed Opt-Out
Requirement to Newborn Genetic Screening
St. Paul, Minnesota - Parents should should be able
to refuse state genetic testing of their children, says
a Minnesota House Committee. The House Ways and Means
committee voted yesterday to attach an amendment by Rep.
Fran Bradley (R-Rochester) to the House Health and Human
Services omnibus bill (HF 437).
"This is a victory for parents and citizens. Genetic
testing should always be at the discretion and choice of
individuals, not the state," says Twila Brase, president
of the Citizens' Council on Health Care.
CCHC CONCERNS INITIATE AMENDMENT
The Bradley amendment, drafted with the assistance of
Reps. Tim Wilkin (R-Eagan) and Jim Abeler (R-Anoka) was
the result of concerns raised in testimony by Citizens'
Council on Health Care on the original language in the
bill.
The original language written by the Minnesota
Department of Health (MDH), did not permit parents to
object to genetic testing except on the basis of
religious tenets and practice. It authorized the
commissioner of health to add genetic tests without
notice or public comment. And all children with
presumptive diagnoses were to be placed on a state
registry of congenital and heritable disorders without
parent consent.
The amendment requires parents to be given an array
of options: participating in the testing, not
participating, or participating but having their
identifying information and blood specimens destroyed
within 24 months of the testing.
GENETIC RESEARCH
Brase remains concerned that parents will not fully
understand that state storage of blood specimens, may
expose them and their children to genetic research. In
2002, health officials received three requests for
access to the DBS of babies. Access was denied because
the department has yet to determine whether or how to
permit access to the specimens.
Although health officials last year recently received
a $75,000 federal grant for development of a 'State
Genetics Plan', Minnesota currently has no specific law
regarding use or dissemination of infant blood
specimens. The health department, which has historically
destroyed DBS after 5 years, decided in 1997 to keep
them permanently. The MDH reports that the dried blood
spots of approximately 350,000 individuals are currently
in storage. This figure will increase by approximately
70,000 a year, the state's annual birth rate.
"Genetic and medical researchers view the DNA of
babies as a huge untapped resource for genetic data.
Despite the potential benefits of genetic testing,
parents and citizens must always be given the right to
authorize or deny access to the private genetic details
of their lives," says Brase.
The Senate HHS omnibus bill, which includes the
original provision on newborn genetic testing, does not
yet have the parent consent amendment attached.
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CCHC is an independent non-profit
free-market health care policy organization located in
St. Paul, Minnesota
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