Victims of genetic discrimination
2nd Nov 2005, 20:34 GMT
Evidence is growing that employers and insurers are discriminating against people whose genes predispose them to serious disease. Initial results from a survey in Australia showed that around 1 in 12 people who have taken a genetic test have suffered specific instances of negative treatment - for example, by being denied appropriate life insurance.
Victims of genetic discrimination related news:
- Victims of genetic discrimination — KeralaNext: Science
- Victims of genetic discrimination speak up — New Scientist - Opinion
- Genetic discrimination might be increasing — Health News
- Honor Parks by continuing her fight — desmoinesregister.com - OPINION
- Discrimination fuels French Muslim rage — BBC News | Latest Published Stories | UK Edition
- Disabled groups in Kashmir allege discrimination in relief — KeralaNext: India
- French Muslims face job discrimination — BBC News | Latest Published Stories | UK Edition
- California computer scientists double volume of data in NIH biotech repository — Medical News Today RSS/XML Feed
- Workplace survey shows traveller discrimination — ireland.com Latest Irish News
- Sciona Announces Immediate Availability of Cellf™ Genetic Assessment Kits Through Its Website at Sciona.com — PR Web (The Free Wire Service) Lifestyle
Latest news from EurekAlert! - Policy and Ethics:
- Bariatric surgery complication rates high in some hospitals, new HealthGrades ratings and study show
- A company's reputation is what gets fried when its books get cooked
- Sensor networks protect containers, navigate robots
- Queen's Surveillance Project benchmarks global attitudes about being watched
- Elderly, ill men get unneeded prostate cancer screenings
- Want fair and affordable health insurance for the uninsured? Ask the public to design it
- New book by University of Minnesota historian exposes Turkey's responsibility in Armenian genocide
- The Last Great Wilderness
- 'Moral clarity' espoused in debate over health-care reform
- RAND study says US should greatly expand efforts