Litcius/Paper detail

Public Trust and Trustworthiness in Biobanking: The Need for More Reflexivity

Gabrielle Samuel, Reinder Broekstra, Felix Gille, Anneke Lucassen

2022Biopreservation and Biobanking21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Low levels of public trust in biobanks are perceived to be a deterrent to participation and a threat to their sustainability. Acting in a "trustworthy" manner is seen to be one approach to ensuring public trust in biobanks. Striving to improve public trust in biobanks and prioritizing the need for institutional trustworthiness are both vital endeavors. However, there has been little discussion in the context of biobanking about the meaning of these two concepts, and the relationship between them. In this article, we argue that it is important to examine this, to ensure clarity around their meaning, as well as their relationship with each other as they apply to biobanking. We conclude by making a series of recommendations for biobanks.

Topics & Concepts

BiobankCLARITYTrustworthinessContext (archaeology)Meaning (existential)Public trustReflexivityPublic relationsEngineering ethicsPolitical sciencePsychologyComputer scienceInternet privacySociologySocial scienceBiologyEngineeringBioinformaticsPaleontologyPsychotherapistBiochemistryEthics in Clinical ResearchPatient Dignity and PrivacyEthics in medical practice