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NIH May 1, 2020 | R01
Incidental Enhancement: Addressing a Neglected Policy Issue in Human Genome Editing
Institution: UNIV OF NORTH CAROLINA CHAPEL HILL
FOA Number: PA-17-444
Abstract
PROJECT NARRATIVE This project is relevant to public health because achieving the health benefits of preventive gene editing research will depend on governance that is responsive to public concerns. This project is relevant to NHGRI?s mission because of the role that new genomic knowledge will play in the policy challenges that the research proposed here helps address.
FUNDING AGENCY:
Funder:
NIHInstitute:
NATIONAL HUMAN GENOME RESEARCH INSTITUTEFunding Type:
R01Project Number:
R01HG010661Start Date:
May 1, 2020End Date:
Feb 28, 2024PROJECT TERMS:
Address, Affect, Agreement, Animal Experimentation, Animals, Asia, authority, Automobile Driving, Basic Science, Case Study, Case-Control Studies, Categories, Clinical, Clinical Protocols, Communities, Consensus, Country, Data, design, Development, Diffusion, Disclosure, Disease, disorder prevention, Empirical Research, Ethical Analysis, Ethics, Europe, experience, Explosion, Future, Genes, Genome, genome editing, Genomics, Goals, health benefit, Human, Human Genetics, Human Genome, Incentives, Influentials, interest, International, Intervention, Interview, Judgment, Knowledge, Laws, Legal, Medical, meetings, member, Mission, Modeling, Modification, Morals, National Human Genome Research Institute, neglect, North America, Pathway interactions, Play, Policies, Policy Analysis, policy implication, Policy Maker, Positioning Attribute, Posture, pre-clinical, prevent, Prevention, Preventive, Preventive Intervention, Process, Professional Role, Public Health, Reporting, Research, Research Design, Role, Science, Science Policy, Scientist, Shapes, social factors, Societies, Sum, Taxonomy, theories, trait, translational pipeline, Translational Research, Translations, Weight, Work