Charting the Ethical Frontier in Newborn Screening Research: Insights from the NBSTRN ELSI Researcher Needs Survey
Yekaterina Unnikumaran, Mei Lietsch, Amy Brower

TL;DR
This paper summarizes a survey on ethical issues in newborn screening research, highlighting the need for better resources and policies to address privacy and informed consent.
Contribution
The paper presents new insights from a survey on ELSI issues in newborn screening, emphasizing stakeholder needs for privacy and informed consent policies.
Findings
Respondents rely heavily on institutional and collegial resources for ELSI questions in newborn screening research.
Privacy was ranked as extremely or very important by most survey participants.
There is a clear need for policies addressing informed consent and educational programs on ELSI for the newborn screening community.
Abstract
From 2008 to 2024, the Newborn Screening Translational Research Network (NBSTRN), part of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Hunter Kelly Newborn Screening Program, served as a robust infrastructure to facilitate groundbreaking research in newborn screening (NBS), public health, rare disease, and genomics. Over its sixteen years, NBSTRN developed into a significant international network, supporting innovative research on novel technologies to screen, diagnose, treat, manage, and understand the natural history of more than 280 rare diseases. The NBSTRN tools and resources were used by a variety of stakeholders including researchers, clinicians, state NBS programs, parents, families, and policy makers. Resources and expertise for the newborn screening community in ethical, legal, and social issues (ELSI) has been an important area of focus for the NBSTRN…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenomics and Rare Diseases · Metabolism and Genetic Disorders · Prenatal Screening and Diagnostics
