The Personal Data Is Political
- PMID: 32091866
- Bookshelf ID: NBK554079
- DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-04363-6_8
The Personal Data Is Political
Excerpt
The success of personalized medicine does not only rely on methodological advances but also on the availability of data to learn from. While the generation and sharing of large data sets is becoming increasingly easier, there is a remarkable lack of diversity within shared datasets, rendering any novel scientific findings directly applicable only to a small portion of the human population. Here, we are investigating two fields that have been majorly impacted by data sharing initiatives, neuroscience and genetics. Exploring the limitations that are a result of a lack of participant diversity, we propose that data sharing in itself is not enough to enable a global personalized medicine.
Copyright 2019, The Author(s).
Sections
References
-
- “23andMe Research”. 2018. https://research.23andme.com/publications/.
-
- Agyeman, AkosuaAdom, and Richard Ofori-Asenso. 2015. Perspective: Does personalized medicine hold the future for medicine? Journal of Pharmacy and Bioallied Sciences 7 (3): 239. https://doi.org/10.4103/0975-7406.160040. - DOI - PMC - PubMed
-
- “All of Us”. 2018. https://allofus.nih.gov.
-
- Bach, D.R., A. Tzovara, and J. Vunder. 2017. Blocking human fear memory with the matrix metalloproteinase inhibitor doxycycline. Molecular Psychiatry 23: 1584–1589. https://doi.org/10.1038/mp.2017.65. - DOI - PMC - PubMed
-
- Bush, William S., Jason H. Moore, J. Li, S.K. McDonnell, and K.G. Rabe. 2012. Chapter 11: Genome-wide association studies. PLoS Computational Biology 8 (12): e1002822. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002822. - DOI - PMC - PubMed
Publication types
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources