Rebecca Cupp
Dr. Fantz
Topic Writing Assignment #2
October 17, 2013
Dean Smith,
What
a pessimistic world we live in, to believe one nucleobase (Brooker 217-218),
one adenine, could determine my academic success. How dare I be prosecuted by
what I cannot change, and notified of what levels of education I can manage. These
“recent discoveries” are not only subject to a thorough peer-review, but to an
ethical review. How can one judge another on what they cannot change? To
separate individuals into genomic categories, like cash crops, is to discriminate
against them, to degrade them, and to delude them into the same narrow-mindedness
as the State of Georgia. Manifested in statute V.123a is the most intolerant
piece of legislation since Dred Scott v. Sandford, to declare that a man could
not be free in a free state based on the pre-existing condition of his skin is nothing
less than to declare a woman unfit to learn based on the pre-existing condition
of her DNA (“Dred Scott v. Standford”) Every individual can be the embodiment of
rags to riches, of pre-disposition to prosperity. To succeed, every individual
must have equal access to healthcare, education and employment, free of
discrimination.
Every
individual has the right to live, and thus, the right to be healthy. Congress
passed the Affordable Care Act to offer each citizen affordable and accessible
healthcare. Health insurance companies, however, need to make money, and
pre-existing genetic conditions, including pre-dispositions to diseases, would
have to fetch higher premiums to compete with the profitability of other,
healthier customers. The 1996 Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPPA) was the first federal stand against genetic discrimination, restricting
any exclusion of healthcare due to a pre-existing condition to 12 months for
any individual on a group plan, and eliminating exclusions for pre-existing
conditions for persons previously covered for over 12 months under group plans.
Genetic information excluded, or undiscovered from a customer’s current
diagnosis by a medical professional ceased to constitute a pre-existing
condition. President Bush followed with
the passing of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) in May
2008, obstructing insurance companies’ rights to charge higher premiums for any
pre-existing condition, including pre-disposition to developing any future
illness. GINA also limited the ability of any health insurance to deny coverage
to any healthy individual. Finally, the Affordable Care Act guaranteed insurance
for both the group and individual insurance market, that is, every group or individual
who requests healthcare will receive it, and can only vary their premium
expenses based on a few factors, typically age and geographic area, to allow
competition with private insurance companies (“Genetic Discrimination”).
Just
as every individual has the right to be healthy, every individual has the right
to their own education and equal opportunity employment. In February 2000, Bill
Clinton passed the Executive order to Prohibit Discrimination in Federal Employment
of Genetic Information, restricting the collection and use of employee’s
genetic information from an employer for the purpose of hiring, firing, or
promotions. The circumstances behind legal genetic screening have been further
defined by the American Medical Association Council on Ethical and Judicial
Affairs, which include, but are not limited to: the disease must rapidly
develop past the reach of preventative medicine, the genetic test is highly
accurate, over 99%, the genetic variation
results in an “unusually elevated susceptibility to occupational
illness”, undue expense is needed to protect employees from potential toxic
substances in the workplace, and any worker screen must provide informed
consent (“Genetic Discrimination”).
The
ethics behind these laws can easily be applied to education. Every individual
has the right to pursue an education, and based on GINA, admission counselors,
much like employer’s, should not use genetic information as a basis for
accepting, rejecting, or revoking admission to their institution. Even if
genetic information was used with consent, it does not satisfy any other
circumstance set by the AMA: a negative correlation with intelligence is not
highly accurate, negative correlation with intelligence is not a disease, nor
can it rapidly develop or be monitored closely, and a negative correlation with
intelligence does not result in any heighted chance of illness nor does it
cause undue expenses toward other students. There is no reason to genetically
screen students, nor is it ethical to use their genetic information to
segregate individual human beings into categories, ripe for discrimination.
If
you have any ounce of intelligence, Dean Smith, check out your college’s
elementary statistics book: correlation does not constitute causation (Triola
151-162). Insurance companies, employers, and colleges should not choose their
customers, employees and students based off pre-existing conditions, and
genetic information cannot be used to distinguish which employees, teachers,
and students would prosper at Agnes Scott College. It is scientifically,
statistically, and ethically wrong to judge any individual based on pre-existing
conditions, including genomic data.
Works
Cited
Bloomberg
Law. "Dred Scott v. Sandford." Case Briefs. N.p., n.d. Web. 17
Oct. 2013.
<http://www.casebriefs.com/blog/law/property/property-law-keyed-to-singer/property-in-people/dred-scott-v-sandford/>.
Brooker,
Robert J. Biology. Boston: McGraw-Hill Higher Education, 2008. Print.
"Genetic
Discrimination." National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) -
Homepage. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Oct. 2013.
<http://www.genome.gov/10002077>.
Triola,
Mario F. Elementary Statistics. 7th ed. Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley,
1998. Print.
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