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Ellen W. Clayton and Bradley Malin are Co-Directors of the Center for Genetic Privacy and Identity in Community Settings (GetPreCiSe), an NIH Center of Excellence in Ethics Research at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. The GetPreCiSe Center integrates a diverse community of interdisciplinary scholars to enhance understanding on the debate about genetic privacy and identity and further inform policy.

The Mentored Scientist Development Award in Research Ethics will fulfill three main goals: 1) to obtain a broad and in-depth foundation in research ethics and to develop research skills in ethical reasoning and analysis in order to become a resource for those pursuing biomedical research; 2) to build a research program on the ethical implications of human genetic variation research for social distributive justice; and 3) to become an independent investigator in the field of research ethics upon the completion of this career development award.

Concerns about privacy and personal identity impede use of data about genomic variation, phenotypes, demographics, and exposures from large numbers of people to uncover the contributions of such information on health and disease, knowledge that can improve clinical care. People worry that these data and genomic data in particular, cannot be secured. Many fear that data about them will be used in ways they oppose (e.g., to deny them and those they love access to jobs and insurance) because existing legal rules about such uses are not comprehensive.

Sexual and gender minorities (SGMs) experience significant disparities in health and health care. These inequities result from complex interactions among social, political, environmental, and genomic factors, all of which must be understood if we are to address these disparities. The research needed to understand the health issues faced by SGM populations will often require analysis of large collections of individual phenotypic and behavioral information, community characteristics, and large-scale genomic data.

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