Login / Signup

Understanding Ethical, Legal and Societal Issues (ELSIs) in Human Biobanking and Genomics for Research and Healthcare in Zimbabwe: The Genomics Inheritance Law Ethics and Society GILES initiative.

Alice MatimbaAndrew ChimatiraOppah KuguyoJames JanuaryZivayi MupambireyiBazondlile Marimbe-DubeVasco ChikwashaZibusiso Nyati-JokomoShamiso MutetiPedzisayi MangezvoAbigail KangwendeAlfred ChingonoMidion Mapfumo ChidzongaJonathan GandariJames HakimKusum NathooChristopher SamkangeWalter MangeziSandra LeeLovemore GwanzuraMildred ChoPaul Ndebele
Published in: AAS open research (2019)
Biobanks and human genomics applications are key for understanding health, disease and heredity in Africa and globally. Growing interest in these technologies calls for strengthening relevant legal, ethical and policy systems to address knowledge disparities and ensure protection of society, while supporting advancement of science. In Zimbabwe there is limited understanding of ethical, legal, and societal issues (ELSI) for biobanking and genomics. The Genomics Inheritance Law Ethics and Society (GILES) initiative was established in 2015 to explore the current status and gaps in the ethical and legal frameworks, knowledge among various stakeholders, and to establish capacity for addressing ELSI of biobanking and genomics as applied in biomedical and population research, and healthcare. A multi-methods approach was applied including document reviews, focus group discussions and in-depth interviews among health and research professionals, and community members in six provinces comprising urban, peri-urban and rural areas. Emerging findings indicates a need for updating guidelines and policies for addressing ELSI in biobanking and genomics research in Zimbabwe. Emerging terminologies such as biobanking and genomics lack clarity suggesting a need for increased awareness and educational tools for health professionals, research scientists and community members. Common concerns relating to consent processes, sample and data use and sharing, particularly where there is trans-national flow of biospecimens and data, call for nationally tailored ELSI frameworks aligned to regional and international initiatives. This paper describes the strategy undertaken for the development and implementation of the GILES project and discusses the importance of such an initiative for characterisation of ELSI of human biobanking and genomics in Zimbabwe and Africa. Conducting this explorative study among a wide range of stakeholders over a countrywide geographical regions, established one of the most comprehensive studies for ELSI of human biobanking and genomics in Africa.
Keyphrases