1/ I'm at #CRISPRconsensus symposium all day. I'm afraid this means one of those live tweeting marathons. Feel free to mute me for 24 hours! It's being live streamed if you're interested, just register. Starting in 15 mins innovativegenomics.org/crispr-consens…
2/ #CRISPRconsensus is going to start in about 5 minutes or so, lots of tech being wrangled right now. But you can watch the live stream here too by the look of it youtube.com/playlist?list=…
3/ Ben Hurlbut, we're here because the technology is so powerful and controversial. Most controversial are human germline editing, ie DNA editing that can be passed on to future generations #CRISPRconsensus
4/ Raises questions on what should and shouldn't be allowed, who should decide etc.
Ben mentions international symposium a few years ago which concluded germline editing shouldn't be allowed until there is a consensus about what should be allowed & what not #CRISPRconsensus
5/ but this raises questions as to whether international consensus can be achieved, and how.
Expert contribution will be part of this, but need broader public dialogue: how, who should lead it, how are the scientific and policy issues going to frame (or not)? #CRISPRconsensus
6/ This symposium was meant to be much larger with 300 members of the public, but the power company is shutting down the power and so had to move to a much smaller room - and public has been excluded, ironically Ben notes #CRISPRconsensus
7/ Lea Witkowsky going through the science now, but noting that we don't need much science to engage with the debate. I think this is critical, the debate is SO much more than DNA science, it's about the intersection of science and society... #CRISPRconsensus
8/ ... it's about our lives, the impact it will have on our health systems, our law, and economic systems, it's about society, morality, economics and governance #CRISPRconsensus
@sxbegle@KeoluFox@IBioethics@TaniaSimoncelli@Wolbring 18/ There are some transnational/islamic institutions which have been deliberating on genomics since the 1990s. Early on discussions focused on the human genome project - should muslim countries be part of this project #CrisprConsensus
@sxbegle@KeoluFox@IBioethics@TaniaSimoncelli@Wolbring 19/ early 2010s discussion changed, joining the human genomic revolution is the right thing to do, and should be a collective effort, so question is now how this should happen, how to manage the ethics etc #CrisprConsensus
@sxbegle@KeoluFox@IBioethics@TaniaSimoncelli@Wolbring 20/ there is a diversity of opinions and indeed conflict, even about the questions, just as there is in the west he notes > it's telling that he feels the need to say this, and probably not surprising given portrayal of islam in the media #CrisprConsensus
@sxbegle@KeoluFox@IBioethics@TaniaSimoncelli@Wolbring 21/ he says that islam doesn't prohibit research which is about seeking knowledge, but in terms of application there is a differentiation between somatic (more open) vs germ line (open if for medical, but much less if for enhancement) #CrisprConsensus
@sxbegle@KeoluFox@IBioethics@TaniaSimoncelli@Wolbring 24/ and the narratives that we're using to understand the technology, it's uses and implications, is embedded in racism, eg discovery of "thrifty" gene in Polynesian people focuses on one narrative about origin stories, rather than the history of colonialism #CrisprConsensus
@sxbegle@KeoluFox@IBioethics@TaniaSimoncelli@Wolbring 25/ and need to be wary of people wanting to create intellectual property claims around specific mutations - what if a mutation exists in an indigenous people's genome, what does it mean for economics, who would benefit? #CrisprConsensus
@sxbegle@KeoluFox@IBioethics@TaniaSimoncelli@Wolbring 27/ to solve this problem, need an infrastructure for self-governance - create a biorepository for indigenous people, create server farms and algorithms for investigating for these communities, build capacity to do this #CrisprConsensus
@sxbegle@KeoluFox@IBioethics@TaniaSimoncelli@Wolbring 31/ and she links this back to the history of medical science's treatment of minority communities >absolutely part of the debate already - see one of my RTs in last 10 days raising important challenges (I'd try to find it but then I'd lost the thread here!) #CrisprConsensus
35/ and all this is also tied up with the debate about rights to choose > adding significantly more fire to the debate #CrisprConsensus
36/ > this session hasn't addressed the question of who the stakeholders are, but exchange that's just gone on notes that the 'disabled community' isn't monolithic in relation to whether to terminate or not....#CrisprConsensus
37/ ... highlighting that having one or two people with disabilities in a conversation isn't bringing in all of a certain type of stakeholder. Need to start thinking in terms of diversity of view as much as ensuring 'representation' of specific groups #CrisprConsensus
38/ Q time: "what does informed consent look like in an age with crispr?" People need to know what is being looked for, before looking for it and aiming to treat it. We don't know downstream concs yet and so informed consent has to wait #CrisprConsensus
39/ Q: is there a single position on abortion in islam?
A: pro-life vs pro-choice doesn't exist. 120 days, calc from moment of conception vs after that. After this period the embryo has human life rather than just life, ie a soul. #CrisprConsensus
40/ Q: "how do you include the next generation in the debate?"
A: in the islamic tradition differentiates between those with legal capacity and those not; guardians can give proxy consent, although now becoming clear more challenging, it can't be reversed later #CrisprConsensus
41/ Q: "indigenous communities poss small, how do large scale experiments needed"
A: current attempt in US trying to sequence 1m genomes, will over select for minority communities. Good intention to treat minority disease, but undermines community sovereignty #CrisprConsensus
42/ Q: 90% of genome catalogued is w European, as climate crisis becomes more acute, crops and bodies adapted for more extreme environments are going to be more in demand. What about the power imbalance" #CrisprConsensus
43/ it's time for a break, phew you breath. I'll be back though with a new thread for the next session #CrisprConsensus
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If there's something relevant from a public engagement perspective I'll add to this thread
2/ Some prepared remarks from ED first. The law worked best, she says, when the publics' views are put front and centre of any data use #IfGDenham
3/ Big things on her desk are #transparency, #AI#algorithms and #BigData < I wonder how many of those are big things from the public's perspectives? Suspect outcomes and impacts are much more relevant, less about data #IfGDenham
1/ Looking forward to the launch of @GenomicsEngland's #newborndialogue report which starts in a few minutes. I'm going to be live tweeting. With over 1000 people signed up it's full, but you can follow along here
3/ If you are interested in finding out more about @sciencewise and the support it offers government bodies to engage the public effectively, you'll find that here - sciencewise.org.uk/about-sciencew…
Sitting in on the "Science and Society, 20 years on: legacy and lessons for a post-Covid world" conference. I'll try to tweet key points that strike me, but not live tweet to avoid spamming you buff.ly/3cnx13O 1/
Kicking off is @jameswilsdon reminding us that the reason for the event is that we are twenty years on since the House of Lords Science and Technology Committee published its seminal report on Science and Society. And the issues in there are still live publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld199900/ld… 2/
How do we balance the educational needs of children against
i. the health needs of teachers,
ii. the health needs of the wider population
iii. the wider economic impact?
2/ Whatever we decide will entail difficult choices which will affect different groups differently, in different ways and over very different timescales. At its starkest, the longer term education of our children vs short term economy?
What a choice, what an awful choice.
3/ But we need to make it, not debating it and trying to ignore it doesn't make the choice go away, it is just made by default, by the virus in fact
The Patch (@BBCRadio4) is a wimsical little programme set around the conceit of investigating a random postcode every episode 1/
The Patch just tackled homelessness in a time of Covid in London’s Square Mile bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0… 2/
The Patch just did for my understanding of homelessness what I think BBC news programmes and esp @BBCr4today should be doing day in day out instead of stupid short gotcha interviews presenting false balance 3/
I share your sense of outrage at what is happening in Portland. But I think that to blame deliberative democracy is to misunderstand what democracy is 1/
2/ Democracy isn't one thing. Here in the UK, through the 80s and 90s, those campaigning for greater democracy were focused on institutions: establishing a constitution, proportional representation, an elected House of Lords etc
3/ All of these things are important components of democracy, but they won't magically transform the UK into some sort of utopian democracy. Not on their own, and not even if they all happened