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New literacy challenge for the twenty-first century: genetic knowledge ispoor even among well educated

Authors :
Emily Smith-Woolley
Maxim Likhanov
Ilya Zakharov
Fatos Selita
Robert Chapman
Yulia Kovas
Source :
Journal of сommunity genetics. 2019. Vol. 10, № 1. P. 73-84, Journal of Community Genetics
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We live in an age of rapidly advancing genetic research. This research is generating new knowledge that has implications for personal health and well-being. The present study assessed the level of genetic knowledge and personal engagement with genetics in a large sample (N = 5404) of participants. Participants received secondary education in 78 countries, with the largest samples from Russia, the UK and the USA. The results showed significant group differences in genetic knowledge between different countries, professions, education levels and religious affiliations. Overall, genetic knowledge was poor. The questions were designed to assess basic genetic literacy. However, only 1.2% of participants answered all 18 questions correctly, and the average score was 65.5%. Genetic knowledge was related to peoples’ attitudes towards genetics. For example, those with greater genetic knowledge were on average more willing to use genetic knowledge for their personal health management. Based on the results, the paper proposes a number of immediate steps that societies can implement to empower the public to benefit from everadvancing\ud genetic knowledge.

Details

Language :
Russian
ISSN :
1868310X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of сommunity genetics. 2019. Vol. 10, № 1. P. 73-84, Journal of Community Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a01451f6b52d06a93f77dfe5a6a92eff