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Læknablaðið - 15.06.1999, Side 58

Læknablaðið - 15.06.1999, Side 58
552 LÆKNABLAÐIÐ 1999; 85 ment available for genetic re- search early on, the research community has had a long and successful history of collabo- rations with international re- search teams. Databases, such as the Can- cer Registry and the Icelandic Heart Association’s databases, have been constructed by various Icelandic institutions. Regulatory agencies such as the National Bioethics Com- mittee and the Data Protection Committee, were established in order to assure that ethical research standards were fol- lowed. deCODE Genetics Founded in Delaware in 1996 by US venture capitalists and several Icelandic scien- tists, deCODE Genetics is the corporation that initiated the HSD. deCODE Genetics is also the corporation that most likely will be granted the exclusive license to the HSD. With the goal to use population genetics to map and clone genes responsible for several common polygenic diseases, deCODE has published an ex- tensive list of diseases current- ly being researched. Several weeks before the fírst HSD bill was introduced deCODE Genetics signed a 200 million USD contract with Hoffman-La Roche, a Swiss pharmaceutical corporation. The details of this contract have not been made public. Recently, deCODE Genetics announced plans to go public upon receiving the exclusive license to the HSD. The price of a limited number of de- CODE shares, already traded in Iceland, has correlated with the passing of the Act on a Health Sector Database. Health Sector Database Act Announced In March 1998, the Minis- try of Health introduced a bill in Parliament for the creation of a Health Sector Database (HSD). The database was meant to be a comprehensive retrospective and prospective collection of medical records of the entire population of Ice- land. Everyone would be in- cluded. There would be no in- formed consent and no provi- sions for opting-out. A mono- poly was to be granted to a single corporation. With no provisions to opt- out and the lack of informed consent, the bill was seen as a violation to human rights. Granting a monopoly of gene- tic research was seen as a serious threat to the research community. The Bill met with heavy opposition and was withdrawn. In June 1998, a new version of a bill was circulated for re- view. In October 1998 after amendments that included an opting-out clause, the Minis- try of Health reintroduced a third version of the bill. Again the bill met with heavy oppo- sition. Despite this, the HSD was, in December 1998, voted into law. The vote was along poli- tical party lines with only one member of the coalition government voting against it. The Act still contains a provi- sion granting a monopoly to a privately funded company for the creation and the commer- cial use of the database; lack of informed consent presides; and the all-inclusive database is legally permitted to link medical records with genea- logical and genetic data. The Icelandic Medical As- sociation recognizes the scientific value of databases containing health information and biological samples. While the IMA supports the use of databases in research, the Act on a Health Sector Database violates basic principles es- tablished to allow the use of these resources and at the same time uphold patient’s autonomy and dignity. Specifically the IMA objects to: 1) Invasion of privacy The sheer amount of data gathered in one place with flawed control mechanisms is a great threat to personal pri- vacy. The HSD Law seriously conflicts with medical data protection principals. The data in the database is encrypted but not anonymous, with a key available to connect names to the coded information. This key will be used routinely to add information about indivi- duals to the database. According to the Act, health data can be connected to genealogical and genetic data and this changes the nature of an already extremely extensive database. The Act specifies that the licensee shall make methods of work and procedures for the inter- connecting of these three databases. Each connection will, however, not be indepen- dently reviewed. Given the definition of what constitutes genetic data (Act. 3, item 7), the extensive interconnection of data from the three data- bases means that individuals will be personally identi- fiable. When invasion of pri- vacy becomes an issue,
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