Litcius/Paper detail

A systematic literature review of the ‘commercialisation effect’ on public attitudes towards biobank and genomic data repositories

Jarrod Walshe, Brad Elphinstone, Dianne Nicol, Mark Taylor

2024Public Understanding of Science13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Initiatives that collect and share genomic data to advance health research are widespread and accelerating. Commercial interests in these efforts, while vital, may erode public trust and willingness to provide personal genomic data, upon which these initiatives depend. Understanding public attitudes towards providing genomic data for health research in the context of commercial involvement is critical. A PRISMA-guided search of six online academic databases identified 113 quantitative and qualitative studies using primary data pertaining to public attitudes towards commercial actors in the management, collection, access, and use of biobank and genomic data. The presence of commercial interests yields interrelated public concerns around consent, privacy and data security, trust in science and scientists, benefit sharing, and the ownership and control of health data. Carefully considered regulatory and data governance and access policies are therefore required to maintain public trust and support for genomic health initiatives.

Topics & Concepts

BiobankContext (archaeology)Public relationsData sharingCorporate governancePublic healthBusinessQualitative propertyData collectionResearch ethicsInternet privacyKnowledge managementPolitical scienceSociologyEngineering ethicsMedicineBioinformaticsEngineeringComputer scienceBiologyAlternative medicinePaleontologyNursingMachine learningPathologySocial scienceFinanceEthics in Clinical ResearchBRCA gene mutations in cancerCRISPR and Genetic Engineering