1. Stakeholders’ perspectives on the post-mortem use of genetic and health-related data for research: a systematic review
- Author
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Hanno L. Tan, Marieke A. R. Bak, Hakan Ateşyürek, Dick L. Willems, M. Corrette Ploem, and Marieke T. Blom
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Genetic testing ,Biomedical Research ,Patients ,CINAHL ,Review Article ,Medical ethics ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,Ethics, Research ,03 medical and health sciences ,Informed consent ,Stakeholder Participation ,Genetics research ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Privacy ,Genetics (clinical) ,Health policy ,Ethics ,0303 health sciences ,Medical education ,Informed Consent ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,030305 genetics & heredity ,06 humanities and the arts ,Institutional review board ,Biobank ,3. Good health ,Attitude ,Female ,060301 applied ethics ,Autopsy ,Psychology ,Qualitative research - Abstract
The majority of biobank policies and consent forms do not address post-mortem use of data for medical research, thus causing uncertainty after research participants’ death. This systematic review identifies studies examining stakeholders’ perspectives on this issue. We conducted a search in MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE and Web of Science. Findings were categorised in two themes: (1) views on the use of data for medical research after participants’ death, and (2) perspectives regarding the post-mortem return of individual genetic research results. An important subtheme was the appropriate authority and degree of control over posthumous use of data. The sixteen included studies all focused on genetic data and used quantitative and qualitative methods to survey perspectives of research participants, family members, researchers and Institutional Review Board members. Acceptability of post-mortem use of data for medical research was high among research participants and their relatives. Most stakeholders thought participants should be informed about post-mortem research uses during initial consent. Between lay persons and professionals, disagreement exists about whether relatives should receive actionable genetic findings, and whether the deceased’s previous preferences can be overridden. We conclude that regulations and ethical guidance should leave room for post-mortem use of personal data for research, provided that informed consent procedures are transparent on this issue, including the return of individual research findings to relatives. Future research is needed to explore underlying causes for differences in views, as well as ethical and legal issues on the appropriate level of control by deceased research participants (while alive) and their relatives.
- Published
- 2019
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