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The Singapore National Precision Medicine Strategy.

Eleanor WongNicolas BertinMaxime HebrardRoberto Tirado-MagallanesClaire BellisWeng Khong LimChee Yong ChuaPhilomena Mei Lin TongRaymond ChuaKenneth MakTit Meng LimWei Yang CheongKwee Eng ThienKhean Teik GohJin Fang ChaiJimmy LeeJoseph Jao Yiu SungTien Yin WongCalvin Woon Loong ChinPeter D GluckmanLiuh Ling GohKenneth Hon Kim BanTin Wee Tannull nullXueling S SimChing-Yu ChengSonia DavilaNeerja KarnaniKhai Pang LeongJian-Jun LiuShyam PrabhakarSebastian Mauer-StrohChandra Shekhar VermaPavitra KrishnaswamyRick Siow Mong GohIrenaeus ChiaClarissa HoDoreen LowSuchin VirabhakJacklyn YongWeiling ZhengShih Wee SeowYee Kwang SeckMingshi KohJohn C ChambersE-Shyong TaiPatrick Boon-Ooi Tan
Published in: Nature genetics (2023)
Precision medicine promises to transform healthcare for groups and individuals through early disease detection, refining diagnoses and tailoring treatments. Analysis of large-scale genomic-phenotypic databases is a critical enabler of precision medicine. Although Asia is home to 60% of the world's population, many Asian ancestries are under-represented in existing databases, leading to missed opportunities for new discoveries, particularly for diseases most relevant for these populations. The Singapore National Precision Medicine initiative is a whole-of-government 10-year initiative aiming to generate precision medicine data of up to one million individuals, integrating genomic, lifestyle, health, social and environmental data. Beyond technologies, routine adoption of precision medicine in clinical practice requires social, ethical, legal and regulatory barriers to be addressed. Identifying driver use cases in which precision medicine results in standardized changes to clinical workflows or improvements in population health, coupled with health economic analysis to demonstrate value-based healthcare, is a vital prerequisite for responsible health system adoption.
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