Consumer Genetics: To Test or Not to Test?
The Personal Genetics Education Project (pgEd), is committed to working with lawyers and policymakers to bridge the knowledge gap between genetics and law.
The Personal Genetics Education Project (pgEd), is committed to working with lawyers and policymakers to bridge the knowledge gap between genetics and law.
The more jurisdictions that adopt a cautionary approach to their own regulations for genome editing, the more likely it is that negative world-wide consequences can be mitigated.

Join us March 8 for a talk that will cover the science of genome editing, including CRISPR, and in particular, the scientific advances made in the field since its principal discovery as an engineering tool in 2012.

By Paul McLean Gene editing is at once promising and perilous. Or, as John Oliver said in a recent episode of his news show, it is ”either going to kill all disease or kill every last one of us.” The Nuffield Council on Bioethics is not as amusing as John Oliver, and unlike the summer…