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Genomics and insurance in the United Kingdom: increasing complexity and emerging challenges.

Padraig DixonRachel H HortonWilliam G NewmanJohn H McDermottAnneke Lucassen
Published in: Health economics, policy, and law (2024)
This article identifies issues relating to the use of genetics and genomics in risk-rated insurance that may challenge existing regulatory models in the UK and elsewhere. We discuss three core issues: (1) As genomic testing advances, and results are increasingly relevant to guide healthcare across an individual's lifetime, the distinction between diagnostic and predictive testing that the current UK insurance code relies on becomes increasingly blurred. (2) The emerging category of pharmacogenetic tests that are predictive only in the context of a specific prescribing moment. (3) The increasing availability and affordability of polygenic scores that are neither clearly diagnostic nor highly predictive, but which nonetheless might have incremental value for risk-rated insurance underwriting beyond conventional factors. We suggest a deliberative approach is required to establish when and how genetic information can be used in risk-rated insurance.
Keyphrases
  • affordable care act
  • health insurance
  • healthcare
  • long term care
  • primary care
  • genome wide
  • cross sectional
  • single cell
  • emergency department
  • copy number
  • dna methylation
  • adverse drug