News & Publications

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CIRGE News

2016

MAY 2016

April 2016

March 2016

February 2016

January 2016

2015

December 2015

November 2015

  • 11/30/15, Washington Examiner
    --'Designer babies' worry both parties
    Several spending bills under consideration in the House of Representatives would prohibit the Food and Drug Administration from spending money related to modifying genes in a human embryo. Hank Greely is quoted here.
  • 11/29/15, San Jose Mercury News
    --'Gene drive' toll can prevent epidemics — but should it?
    A technology called "gene drive" makes it possible to alter a population's genetics, a technique that could help eliminate malaria and other insect-borne diseases. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is quoted.
  • 11/27/15, New York Times
    --Open season is seen in gene editing of animals
    This piece looks at the rapid advent of gene-edited animals, and how new techniques have made previously impossible goals fast and inexpensive enough for many researchers to find worth pursuing. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is quoted.
  • 11/23/15, Huffington Post
    --This technology can fight cancer and create adorable mini pigs. So why are scientists so worried?
    The gene-editing technique CRISPR has made it relatively easy to change or delete genetic material, raising a host of ethical dilemmas. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is quoted here.
  • 11/23/15, Inside Stanford Medicine
    --Bioethics team creates online repository of advice on ethical research practices
    A team of bioethicists from across the nation has developed a standardized approach to collecting and sharing advice on conducting ethical human-subject research. The effort was led by Mildred Cho, professor of pediatrics and of medicine and associate director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, and Benjamin Wilfond of the Seattle Children’s Research Institute and University of Washington.
  • 11/16/15, New Yorker
    --The gene hackers
    By using the molecular tools known as CRISPR, researchers can cut and paste genetic material, a technique that has numerous applications but also poses ethical challenges. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is quoted in this article.

August 2015

June 2015

May 2015

  • 05/18/15, San Jose Mercury News
    --National academies will meet to guide "gene editing" research
    Next fall, top international experts will meet to create voluntary standards to govern the use of controversial "gene editing" technology. This article quotes Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics.
  • 05/06/15, Scope
    --Stanford panel: Big issues will loom when everyone has their genomic sequence on a thumb drive
    The cost and timing of genetic sequencing has dropped significantly in recent years, raising many questions. This entry highlights a panel discussion titled "Genetic privacy: The right (not) to know" as part of an Alumni Day event. Panelists included Mildred Cho, professor of pediatrics and associate director of the SCBE; Hank Greely, with the SCBE and director of the Stanford Center for Law and the Biosciences; and Michael Snyder, the Stanford W. Ascherman Professor, chair of the Department of Genetics, and director of the Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine at Stanford.
  • 05/04/15, Vox
    --A guide to CRISPR, the human gene-editing tool that has scientists excited — and terrified
    This article, which explains the gene-editing technology, includes a quote from Hank Greely, chair of Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics and director of the Center for Law and the Biosciences.

April 2015

MARCH 2015

  • 03/21/15, San Francisco Chronicle
    --New gene-altering technique worries scientists
    A group of 20 scientists and ethicists, including Stanford's Paul Berg and Hank Greely, signed a letter published in Science Express calling for guidelines to regulate genome editing tools. Berg, the Vivian K. and Robert W. Cahill Professor in Cancer Research, Emeritus, and Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics and director of the Center for Law and the Biosciences, are quoted in this article.
  • 03/19/15, MIT Technology Review
    --Scientists call for a summit on gene-edited babies
    A group of 20 scientists and ethicists, including Stanford's Paul Berg and Hank Greely, signed a letter published in Science Express calling for guidelines to regulate genome editing tools. Berg, the Vivian K. and Robert W. Cahill Professor in Cancer Research, Emeritus, is quoted in this article. The letter is also discussed in a Scope blog entry that mentions Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics and director of the Center for Law and the Biosciences.
  • 03/05/15, MIT Technology Review
    --Engineering the perfect baby
    Scientists are learning how to edit the DNA of germ line cells and embryos. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics and director of the Center for Law and the Biosciences, is quoted in this piece.
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February 2015

  • 02/06/15, Forum (KQED-FM)
    After a parliamentary vote last week, the United Kingdom is set to become the first country to legalize making a baby with DNA from three parents. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics and director of the Stanford Center for Law and the Biosciences, was part of a panel that discussed the technology and explored whether the U.S. and other countries may follow Britain's lead.
  • 02/05/15, San Jose Mercury News
    --California politicians urge repeal of 'opt out' provision of vaccination law
    All eligible children should be vaccinated, several California state senators say. David Magnus, the Thomas A. Raffin Professor in Medicine and Biomedical Ethics and director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is quoted in this article.

January 2015

  • 01/24/15, San Jose Mercury News
    --Testing for mortality: A way to measure our bodies' risk of disease
    This piece discusses telomere testing as a way to predict age-related diseases. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics and director of Stanford's Center for Law and the Biosciences, comments on the growing concern among federal regulators.
  • 01/21/15, CBS News
    --Growing human kidneys in rats sparks ethical debate
    As scientists strive to grow human fetal kidneys in rats, it raises important ethical questions, said Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics and director of the Center for Law and the Biosciences.
  • 01/21/15, Vox.com
    --Obama singled out personalized medicine as the future. But what exactly is that?
    In his State of the Union address last night, President Obama mentioned launching a new Precision Medicine Initiative. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, provides comment in this article.
  • 1/14/15, Think Out Loud (Oregon Public Broadcasting)
    This segment focused on the legal and ethical concerns surrounding genome sequencing, as well as the issues of informed consent, privacy and data security. Kelly Ormond, professor of genetics, was interviewed.
  • 01/06/15, Forbes.com
    --Surprise! With $60 million Genentech deal, 23andMe has a business plan
    Genentech will sequence the whole genomes of 3,000 people from 23andMe's Parkinson's disease community in an effort to identify drug targets, the companies announced yesterday. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics (SCBE) and director of the Center for Law and the Biosciences at Stanford University, is quoted in this piece.
  • 01/02/15, San Francisco Chronicle
    --Most parents want their babies' genome sequenced, study finds
    The majority of parents surveyed in a new study said they would be interested in having some - or all - of their newborn’s genome sequenced. This article discusses how some researchers raise ethical questions about how much families should know about the results. Mildred Cho, associate director of the SCBE and an associate professor of pediatrics and genetics, provides comment.

2014

October 2014

  • 10/21/14, ScientificAmerican.com
    --Does your average scientist need an ethicist on call?
    This piece discusses how bioethicists are setting up consultancies for research, but some scientists question whether they are a necessity. Mildred Cho, professor of pediatrics and associate director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, provides comment here.
  • 10/22/14, Inside Stanford Medicine (online)
    --A conversation with a cancer patient about palliative care
    Palliative care expert Timothy Quill recently held an intimate conversation with Paul Kalanithi, a Stanford neurosurgeon, suffering from advanced lung cancer and discussed how physicians should talk to patients with serious illnesses about quality-of-life care during the 24th annual Jonathan J. King Lecture presented by the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics.
  • 10/06/14, New York Times

    --Sprinter Dutee Chand fights ban over her testosterone level
    Dutee Chand, India’s 100-meter champion in the 18-and-under category, was barred from competing against women because of naturally elevated testosterone levels. Katrina Karkazis, senior research scholar at the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is quoted in this piece.

September 2014

  • Time.com, 09/23/14
    --If synthetic biology lets us play God, we need rules
    This piece looks at the emerging field of synthetic biology and what can be done to prevent certain technologies from falling into the wrong hands. Sandra Soo-Jin Lee, a senior research scholar at the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is featured here.
  • Inside Stanford Medicine, 09/22/14
    --Videos explain concepts of clinical research
    Bioethicists are releasing videos and policy guidelines that aim to promote more ethical comparative-effectiveness research within medical practices. David Magnus, the Thomas A. Raffin Professor and director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics (SCBE), is leading a study that explores the ethical implications of this kind of research. Mildred Cho, professor of pediatrics and associate director of the SCBE; senior scholar Sandra Soo-Jin Lee; Philip Lavori, professor and chair of health research and policy; Steven Alexander, professor of pediatrics; David Rosenthal, professor of pediatrics; and Glenn Chertow, professor of medicine, are also mentioned in this piece.
  • Slate.com, 09/12/14
    --A new study supports female athletes unfairly excluded from sport
    This piece discusses the ongoing debate over sex verification in sports. The work of Katrina Karkazis, senior research scholar at the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is referenced here.
  • 9/3/14 aeon.com
    --Precognitive police
    Article discussing the complexities of predictive policing. Colleen Berryessa, former CIRGE program manager, and Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, provide comments.

August 2014

  • 08/26/14, Scientific American

    --Multitasking gene may help drone operators control robotic swarms
    Mildred Cho, professor of pediatrics and associate director at the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is quoted in this article describing how a genetic variant that elevates dopamaine levels could lead to better performance in complex multitasking scenarios.
  • 08/12/14, Scope
    --Film documents rise and fall of a genome matching service – and poses tough ethical questions
    This blog entry highlights “The Perfect 46," a film about a geneticist who creates a website that pairs an individual with their ideal genetic partner for children. The movie, which was recently screened at Stanford, included a panel discussion featuring Michael Snyder, the Stanford W. Ascherman, MD, FACS, Professor and chair of the Department of Genetics, and Sandra Lee, a senior researcher at the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics.
  • 08/07/14, California Healthline

    --More live organ donations needed to address gap in California

    This piece highlights the latest Stanford Health Policy Forum, which focused on ways to end our country’s organ-donor shortage. David Magnus, the Thomas A. Raffin Professor of Medicine and Biomedical Ethics, professor of pediatrics and director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is quoted here.
  • 08/05/14, San Francisco Chronicle
    --Organ shortage prompts debate over compensating donors
    This piece highlights the latest Stanford Health Policy Forum, which focused on ways to end our country’s organ-donor shortage. David Magnus, the Thomas A. Raffin Professor of Medicine and Biomedical Ethics, professor of pediatrics and director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is quoted here. A video of the panel discussion is also now available online.
  • 08/04/14 - SCBE's Kate Darling, Angie Boyce, CIRGE PI Mildred Cho, and Pamela Sankar published “What is the FDA Going to Think?”: Negotiating Values through Reflective and Strategic Category Work in Microbiome Science in Science, Technology & Human Values!
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July 2014

  • 07/31/14 - CIRGE Program Manager Colleen Berryessa published Judiciary Views on Criminal Behaviour and Intention of Offenders with High-Functioning Autism in the Journal of Intellectual Disabilities and Offending Behaviour!
  • Time.com, 07/28/14 --Google seeks human guinea pigs for health project. Most biomedical research is focused on disease and specific treatments for illness, rather than on understanding what it means to be healthy. Now researchers at Stanford, in collaboration with Duke University and Google X, are planning a comprehensive initiative to understand the molecular markers that are key to health and the changes in those biomarkers that may lead to disease. This article mentions the work, as do a Newsweek.com article and a PasteMagazine.com piece that quotes Sanjiv Sam Gambhir, professor and chair of radiology and director of the Canary Center at Stanford for Cancer Early Detection. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, also provides comment in an opinion piece on the project from Re/code.
  • 07/08/14 - CLB Fellow Jake Sherkow and CIRGE Co-PI Chris Scott published Myriad stands alone in Nature Biotechnology!
  • San Francisco Chronicle, 07/02/14
    --Minna Life's kGoal device raises ethical questions
    The kGoal device helps women exercise their pelvic muscles and links to a smartphone to give feedback on the effectiveness of their exercise regimen. The device has raised more than $32,000 on Kickstarter, even though the crowdfunding site prohibits raising money for medical projects. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is quoted. 

June 2014

Slate.com, 06/10/14
--Politics in your DNA
This piece discusses how chimerism and genetic mosaicism complicate the "personhood movement." Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, provides comment.

May 2014

  • Mendelspod.com, 05/21/14
    --Stanford's Big Data in Biomedicine conference turns two
    This blog piece highlights the Big Data in Biomedicine Conference, held on campus May 21-23.  Stephen Quake, the Lee Otterson Professor in the School of Engineering and a professor of bioengineering; Julia Salzman, assistant professor of biochemistry; Michael Snyder, the Stanford W. Ascherman, MD, FACS, Professor and chair of the Department of Genetics; and Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, are mentioned here.
  • Inside Stanford Medicine, 05/19/14
    --Employee recognition award winners announced
    The Stanford School of Medicine recently announced this year's winners of the Spirit Award and the Inspiring Change Leadership Award. The Spirit Award, given to staff members who show outstanding performance, dedication and positive attitude, went to Christopher Dolph, the Willed Body Program coordinator and lab coordinator in the Division of Clinical Anatomy, and to Anne Crowe, assistant director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics.
  • Inside Stanford Medicine, 05/19/14 --Network launched to connect musicians, music lovers
    The new Stanford Music Network will connect faculty, staff and student musicians for group practices, and organize chamber music and string quartet groups. Dean Lloyd Minor; Steve Goodman, associate dean for research and translational science; Audrey Shafer, professor of anesthesiology and director of the Medicine and Muse Program, and Ben Robison, a medical student and professional violinist; are featured in this story.
  • 05/02/14 - CIRGE PI Mildred Cho published Open-Label Extension Studies: Are They Really Research? in the American Journal of Bioethics!
  • MIT Technology Review, May/June 2014
    --10 breakthrough technologies
    This issue highlights the 10 most important technology milestones of the past year; brain mapping is included. Karl Deisseroth, the D.H Chen Professor, professor of bioengineering and of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, is featured for pioneering the technique CLARITY, which can convert biological systems into a fully transparent form, allowing researchers to visualize and study the brain's 3-D structure and circuitry using standard molecular probes. The piece also lists genome editing as one of the top breakthroughs; Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, provides comment.

April 2014

March 2014

February 2014

January 2014

  • VICE (Motherboard), 01/31/14
    Hank Greely and Sandra Lee were featured in the article "Should the FDA Take a More Libertarian Stance Towards Personal Genomics?" on VICE's science and technology blog.
  • KTVU-TV, 01/30/14
    This segment looked at how decisions are made about who does and does not get onto the wait list for a life-saving organ transplant. David Magnus, the Thomas A. Raffin Professor and director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, was interviewed.
  • 01/16/14 - SCBE Senior Research Scholar Christopher Scott and his colleagues published Fit to Print? Media Accounts of Unproven Medical Treatments Across Time in AJOB Empirical Bioethics!
  • Time.com, 01/09/14
    --Ariel Sharon: Lessons from his years in a coma
    Former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon died Saturday after 8 years in a coma. This piece explores the line between what’s reasonable and what’s excessive when it comes to medical care for patients in vegetative states and quotes David Magnus, the Thomas A. Raffin Professor and director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics.
  • New York Times, 01/04/14
    --A brain is dead, a heart beats on
    This piece discusses the legal battle involving Jahi McMath, a 13-year-old Oakland girl who was declared brain dead after undergoing a tonsillectomy. David Magnus, the Thomas A. Raffin Professor in Medicine and director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, provides comment here and in articles from CBSNews.com and the San Francisco Chronicle. Paul Graham Fisher was appointed by Alameda County to be an independent reviewer into the case and is quoted in numerous articles, including the Los Angeles Times, NBCBayArea.com and USAToday.com. Fisher is the Beirne Family Professor of Pediatric Neuro-Oncology and chief of pediatric neurology.
  • Time.com, 01/03/14
    --Brain death really is death
    This piece co-written by David Magnus discusses the definition of brain death. Magnus is the Thomas A. Raffin Professor in Medicine and director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics.

December 2015

2013

December 2013

  • VentureBeat.com, 12/31/13
    --Stanford prof: Why I won't waste my money on a DNA test in 2014
    In this piece, Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, weighs in on the future of genetic testing.
  • Forum (KQED-FM), 12/30/13
    During this segment, physicians and ethicists, including David Magnus, discussed the Jahi McMath case and the definition of brain death.

November 2013

  • Forum (KQED-FM), 11/26/13
    The FDA has ordered 23andMe to halt all sales and marketing of its gene testing kits because of concerns that inaccurate results from the direct-to-consumer tests, or results that are not adequately understood by patients, could lead to dangerous decisions. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, was among the guests who discussed the FDA's orders and the future of personal gene tests.
  • Time.com, 11/12/13
    --Boy, girl or intersex?
    On Nov. 1, the German parliament passed a law that gives parents the option of leaving the gender blank on a child’s birth certificate. Katrina Karkazis, senior research scholar in the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, provides comment in this story.
  • 11/06/13 - CIRGE PI Mildred Cho co-authored Reflections on the Cost of "Low-Cost" Whole Genome Sequencing: Framing the Health Policy Debate in PLoS Biology!
  • Morning Edition (NPR), 11/04/13
    This piece discussed privacy issues related to getting your microbes analyzed. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, was interviewed.

October 2013

September 2013

  • 09/12/13 - Former CIRGE post-doc Lauren Milner, CIRGE post-bacc Emily Liu, and former CIRGE post-doc Nanibaa' Garrsion published Relationships Matter: Ethical Considerations for Returning Results to Family Members of Deceased Subjects in the American Journal of Bioethics!
  • San Jose Mercury News, 09/05/13
    --Long-frozen embryo brings joy to adoptive parents
    Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, provides comment in this story on the cryopreservation of embryos.
  • Forum (KQED-FM), 09/03/13
    -- The first hour of this morning’s program focused on the revival of extinct species and featured Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics. On Monday’s program, playwright and actress Anna Deavere Smith discussed her one-woman show "Let Me Down Easy,” and how her many interviews at Stanford’s medical school helped shape the production.

August 2013

  • Washington Post, 08/26/13
    --Baby boy is the first to result from new embryo screening technique
    This story discusses the first child to be born after his parents screened the genomes of a batch of embryos for abnormalities, in an effort to pick the healthiest for implantation. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is quoted.
  • Palo Alto Weekly, 08/02/13 
    --Entering the brave new world of genomics  
    Stanford's work in genomics is the focus of this lengthy cover story. Michael Snyder, the Stanford W. Ascherman, MD, FACS, Professor in Genetics and director of the Stanford Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine; Stephen Galli, the Mary Hewitt Loveless, M.D. Professor and center co-director; Atul Butte, associate professor of pediatrics and of genetics; David Magnus, the Thomas A. Raffin Professor and director of the Center for Biomedical Ethics, are all quoted, with Galli saying he's "never seen a more exciting time in medicine than now."

July 2013

June 2013

  • 06/19/13 - CIRGE Post-Doc Lauren Milner and CIRGE PI Mildred Cho published Focusing on Cause or Cure? Priorities and Stakeholder Presence in Childhood Psychiatry Research in AJOB Primary Research!
  • TheScientist.com, 06/18/13
    --Gene patents decision: Everybody wins
    This piece discusses the Supreme Court's recent decision on gene patenting and features Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics (SCBE). An Inside Stanford Medicine story also delves into the ruling and what it means for patient care; Greely; Douglas Blayney, the Ann and John Doerr Medical Director of the Stanford Cancer Institute and professor of medicine at the school; Mark Pegram, the Susy Yuan-Huey Hung Professor; Mildred Cho, professor of pediatrics and associate director of the SCBE; Michael Snyder, the Stanford W. Ascherman, MD, FACS, Professor in Genetics and director of Stanford's Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine; Atul Butte, associate professor of pediatrics and of genetics; and Christopher Scott, senior research scholar in the SCBE and director of Stanford's Program on Stem Cells in Society, are all featured.
  • --Independent Lens (PBS), 06/17/13
    The Revolutionary Optimists
    , a documentary co-directed and co-produced by Maren Grainger-Monsen and Nicole Newnham, will air on the Emmy Award-winning series Independent Lens, hosted by Stanley Tucci, tonight at 10 p.m. on KQED. Grainger-Monsen is founder and director of the Program in Bioethics in Film at the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics. Newnham is an independent documentary filmmaker, currently a filmmaker-in-residence with the program.
    http://med.stanford.edu/ism/2013/june/brief-optimists-0610.html
  • NationalGeographic.com, 06/14/13
    --7 takeaways from Supreme Court's gene patent decision
    This piece discusses the Supreme Court’s recent decision on gene patenting and what it means for patients and the biotech industry. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is featured here.
  • Los Angeles Times, 06/14/13
    --Researchers hail Supreme Court decision on gene patent
    The U.S. Supreme Court yesterday issued their anxiously awaited decision in a case that raised the issue of whether companies like Salt Lake City-based Myriad Genetics, Inc. can patent genes, in this case, the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes. The Court ruled that naturally isolated DNA is not patentable, but that synthetic DNA (such as the cDNA for the BRCA1 and 2 genes) is patentable. Euan Ashley, assistant professor of cardiovascular medicine, is quoted in this article. The decision is also discussed in stories from MIT Technology review, which quotes Hank Greely; Wired.com, which quotes Drew Endy, assistant professor of bioengineering; and entries on the Stanford blog Scope, which feature Carlos Bustamante, professor of genetics, and Jake Sherkow, a fellow at the Stanford Center for Law and Biosciences.
    http://scopeblog.stanford.edu/2013/06/13/reaction-on-gene-patenting-ruling-from-around-the-web/
    http://scopeblog.stanford.edu/2013/06/13/a-closer-look-at-supreme-courts-decision-on-gene-patenting/
  • Forum (KQED), 06/14/13
    This segment discussed the Supreme Court's decision on gene patenting. Mildred Cho, professor of pediatrics and associate director of the SCBE, talked about the decision and its implications.
  • Science Friday (NPR), 06/07/13
    This segment discussed the issue of genetic disclosures and just how much might be too much information for patients and doctors. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, and Kelly Ormond, director of the genetic counseling training program at Stanford, were featured on the program.
  • 06/07/13 - "Bioethicists say criticisms of preemie oxygen study could have "chilling effect" on clinical research" -- The federal Office for Human Research Protections (OHRP) has decided to suspend sanctions it imposed earlier this year on a study of blood oxygen levels used to treat premature infants. Last week, a group of more than 40 of the country’s top bioethicists, including David Magnus, the Thomas A. Raffin Professor and director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics (SCBE), and Mildred Cho, professor of pediatrics and associate director of the SCBE, sent a letter to OHRP stating that the sanctions could have a chilling effect on much-needed clinical research.
  • 06/07/13 - "Second child placed on adult transplant list" -- Debate over the age restriction for lung transplants intensifies, as a second child is temporarily placed on the waiting list for adult lung recipients. David Magnus, director of the Center for Biomedical Ethics at Stanford University, and Howard M. Nathan of the Gift of Life Donor program discuss. 
  • 06/06/13 - SCBE Project Manager Emily Borgelt, SCBE Senior Research Scholar Chris Scott, and UBC's Shafik Dharamsi published Dear Student: Stem Cell Scientists' Advice to the Next Generation in Cell Stem Cell!
  • Today Show (NBC), 06/05/13
    A ten-year old girl is waiting for a lung transplant while struggling with cystic fibrosis. This segment discussed how national transplant rules don't allow children under the age of 12 to receive adult lungs. David Magnus, the Thomas A. Raffin Professor and director of the SCBE, was featured.
  • Forum (KQED-FM), 06/04/13
    --On Monday the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that police may take DNA from people arrested in connection with serious crimes. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, was interviewed during this segment.
  • 06/04/13 - CIRGE Post-Doc Nanibaa' Garrison and two of her colleagues at UC Berkeley and University of Washington published Forensic familial searching: scientific and social implications in Nature Reviews Genetics!
  • 06/04/13 - CIRGE PI Mildred Cho, former CIRGE Post-Bacc Lauren Sayres, and their colleagues from Duke published Commercial landscape of noninvasive prenatal testing in the United States in Prenatal Diagnosis!
  • 06/04/13 - Stanford Genetic Counselor Megan Grove and SCBE's Maya Wolpert, Mildred Cho, Sandra Lee, and Kelly Ormond published Views of Genetics Health Professionals on the Return of Genomic Results in the Journal of Genetic Counseling!
  • Los Angeles Times, 06/03/13
    --Supreme Court allows police to take DNA sample after an arrest
    On Monday the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that police may take DNA from people arrested in connection with serious crimes. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics (SCBE), provides comment in this story.

May 2013

April 2013

  • MIT Technology Review, 04/23/13
    --Prenatal DNA sequencing
    This piece explores prenatal DNA sequencing, which is being featured as one of the 10 breakthrough technologies of 2013. Stephen Quake, the Lee Otterson Professor in the School of Engineering and professor of bioengineering, and Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, are quoted.
  • SCBE Senior Research Scholar Katrina Karkazis and Stanford medical student Katie Miller published Health Beliefs and Practices in an Isolated Polygamist Community of Southern Utah in the Journal of Religion and Health!
  • NPR, 04/19/13
    The Supreme Court is currently hearing arguments on whether or not human genes can be patented. Mildred Cho, associate director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, discussed the case against Myriad Genetics during this segment.
  • CIRGE Post-Doc Lauren Milner and SCBE Director David Magnus published Can Informed Consent Go Too Far? Balancing Consent and Public Benefit in Research in the American Journal of Bioethics!
  • Stanford Report, 4/8/13
    --Hank Greely on the ethics of resurrecting extinct species
    Scientists predict that within 15 years they will be able to revive some recently extinct species, such as the dodo or the passenger pigeon, raising the question of whether or not they should – just because they can. Law Professor Hank Greely weighs in.

March 2013

  • Seattle Times, 03/28/13
    --'The Revolutionary Optimists': A story of hope in Indian slums
    “The Revolutionary Optimists," an award-winning documentary by Maren Grainger-Monsen and Nicole Newnham, is reviewed in this piece. The film chronicles the story of a lawyer-turned-social entrepreneur working to empower children living in Calcutta’s poorest neighborhood to become leaders in improving health and sanitation. Grainger-Monsen is director of the Program in Bioethics at the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, and Nicole Newnham is a filmmaker and writer in the program.
  • CIRGE Program Manager Colleen Berryessa and CIRGE PI Mildred Cho published Ethical, Legal, Social, and Policy Implications of Behavioral Genetics in the Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics

February 2013

  • Stanford Daily, 02/01/13
    --Hank Greely wins prestigious Lyman award
    Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, is the recipient of the Lyman Award, a prestigious honor given in recognition of faculty service by the Stanford Alumni Association.

January 2013

2012

December 2012

November 2012

  • Forum (KQED), 11/26/12
    --The UC Davis School of Medicine is the focus of several investigations after two of its doctors were found to have conducted experimental treatments on dying cancer patients without proper approval. David Magnus, the Thomas A. Raffin Professor in Medicine and Biomedical Ethics and director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics (SCBE) was part of a panel that discussed safe and ethical approaches to medical research involving the terminally ill. Link>>
  • 11/01/12 - CIRGE collaborator Jaime King published Politics and Fetal Diagnostics Collide in Nature!

October 2012

September 2012

  • 9/28/12 - Missed Duke Professor Robert Cook-Deegan's Sept. 28th CIRGE Speaking Event? A recording can be found HERE!
  • Morning Edition (NPR), 09/25/12
    --This segment discussed a family's experience with whole-genome sequencing. Hank Greely, with the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, was featured.

August 2012

July 2012

  • Booster Shots (LATimes.com), 07/25/12
    --Fetal DNA tests: Will patents work against patients?
    This article discusses how patenting and licensing for fetal DNA testing could have serious consequences for technology advances and benefits to public health. The issue was the subject of a paper co-authored by Mildred Cho, associate director of the SCBE, and Megan Allyse.
  • Huffington Post, 07/26/12
    --Optogenetics: A novel technology with questions old and new
    This piece focuses on some of the questions posed by optogenetics, a technique that combines genetic engineering of brain cells with fiber optics. Karl Deisseroth, associate professor of bioengineering and of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, pioneered the technology and is quoted here. Lauren Milner and Megan Allyse, postdoctoral scholars in the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics (SCBE), also provide comment.
  • Former, CIRGE Post-Baccalaureate fellow Lauren Sayres, CIRGE Post-Doctoral Fellow Megan Allyse. CIRGE PI Midred Cho, and Taylor A. Godspeed published In the Public Interest? in Science Translational Medicine.

June 2012

May 2012

March 2012

February 2012

January 2012

2011

December 2011

November 2011

  • CIRGE Post-Doctoral Fellows Megan Allyse and Lauren Milner were cited in The Military's DNA in Genome Technology.

September 2011

August 2011

July 2011

June 2011

May 2011

April 2011

  • All CIRGE Fellows presented their research at the ELSI Congress in Chapel Hill, NC. A full conference program can be found here.

January 2011

2010

November 2010

October 2010

September 2010

  • CIRGE is pleased to welcome new Post-Doctoral Fellow, Lauren Milner.
  • CIRGE scholar Chris Scott commented on the use of human tissue created from stem cells to identify potentially dangerous side-effects from drugs under development before undergoing expensive human trials. Click here to read more.

August 2010

July 2010

June 2010

May 2010

April 2010

  • CIRGE has moved! Please note the change in our address to 1215 Welch Road, Modular A, Stanford, CA  94305-5417. All phone numbers will remain the same.

March 2010

  • CIRGE Postdoctoral Fellow Nanibaa' Garrison was interviewed on the Native America Calling radio station about genetic testing in Native America on March 31.
  • CIRGE is pleased to welcome applications for a new Program Manager, two Postbaccalaureate Fellows and two Postdoctoral Fellows. For more information, please visit our Employment Opportunities page under "Center Activities."
  • Predicting Phenotype from Genotype: Normal Pigmentation* by CIRGE Scholar Nanibaa' Garrison has been published in the Journal of Forensic Sciences.

2009

December 2009

November 2009

  • CIRGE Scholars Mildred Cho and Jennifer Ladd presented Maren Grainger-Monsen's new film Citizen Scientists at the November 2009 Public Responsibility in Research & Medicine advancing ethical research conference.

October 2009

  • CIRGE would like to welcome new postdoctoral fellow Nanibaa' Garrison. Nanibaa's research interests include personal genomics, human genetic ancestry and evolutionary history, and issues with privacy and confidentiality.

September 2009

  • CIRGE would like to welcome new postdoctoral fellow CJ Murdoch. CJ is also part of the SCBE Program on Stem Cells in Society and the Stanford Law School Center for Law and the Biosciences. CJ will work on ethical and legal issues in stem cell research and behavioral genomics.

August 2009

  • CIRGE Scholar David Magnus discussed the necessity for health care reform in a recent Stanford Medicine podcast.

July 2009

  • CIRGE wishes former postdoctoral fellow Teneille Brown much luck and success in her new position as Associate Professor of Law at S.J. Quinney College of Law, University of Utah.
  • CIRGE Scholars Kelly Ormond and Hank Greely voiced cautions about direct-to-consumer genetic testing in the ACP Internist
  • In an article for Politics Daily, CIRGE Scholar Mildred Cho commented on the complexity of the health care system.
  • CIRGE Scholar Sandra Lee presented her work on social networking and direct-to-consumer genomics at the July 2009 Genetics & Ethics in the 21st Century conference.
  • In a local paper, CIRGE Scholar Sandra Lee commented on the need for federal regulations for companies offering direct-to-consumer genetic testing.
  • CIRGE Scholar Hank Greely commented on the practice of banking newborn blood samples in The Baltimore Sun.
  • The Illusive Gold Standard in Genetic Ancestry Testing has been published by CIRGE Scholar Sandra Lee in Science.

June 2009

April 2009

March 2009

February 2009

January 2009

2008

December 2008

  • Several presentations from the CIRGE 2006 Interpreting Complexity and 2008 Capturing Complexity Symposia are now featured on Nature Precedings as highlighted collections. Videos of the presentations are also linked from Nature Precedings to GoogleVideo.
  • Professor and CIRGE scholar Hank Greely commented on the issue of cognitive enhancement in a December 8, 2008 USNews.com article. He was also the coauthor of a December 7, 2008Nature commentary on the topic.

November 2008

October 2008

  • CIRGE scholars Mildred Cho, Hank Greely and Teneille Brown were all quoted in the WSJ article entitled Gene Screen: Will we Vote Against a Candidate's DNA?
  • CIRGE scholar Dr. Maren Grainger-Monsen presents her newest documentary film entitled Citizen Scientists at the ASBH 10th Annual Meeting.
  • Professor Hank Greely comments on the use of neuroscience and brain imaging in the court system in an October 17th article in the San Francisco Chronicle.

2007

August 2007

  • CIRGE is pleased to welcome a new postdoctoral fellow, Teneille Brown, to the Center. Teneille graduated from the University of Michigan law school in 2004 and then practiced law at Latham & Watkins, LLP in Washington DC. Her work at the Center will focus on the intersection between behavioral genetics and the law, including the admissibility of genetics data in the courtroom.

May 2007

  • CIRGE's Bio-Medical Ethics Reference Server (BMERS) is now live. BMERS is a tool for collecting, annotating, and sharing references and research on bio-medical ethics. If you are a researcher in biomedical ethics and would like an account, please contact the Center for more information.

March 2007

  • All presentations from the CIRGE 2006 Symposium entitled Interpreting Complexity: the Scientific and Social Meaning of Behavioral Genetics are now available as streaming video (Quicktime player needed).  Start by viewing the introduction by Dr. Mildred Cho.

February 2007