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My Genome, My Self?

theodp writes "After baring his DNA for the world to see, Steven Pinker follows up in the NYT Magazine with his take on the coming era of consumer genetics. Pinker comes away less wide-eyed than Time Magazine about the current predictive ability of $399 genetic tests, but is convinced enough to opt out of learning whether he has a gene that increases the risk of Alzheimer's and believes that genetic-testing-for-the-masses may hasten the arrival of national health insurance ('piecemeal insurance is not viable in a world in which insurers can cherry-pick the most risk-free customers'). Pinker believes that personal genomics is just too much fun to ban, but for now suggests: 'if you want to know whether you are at risk for high cholesterol, have your cholesterol measured; if you want to know whether you are good at math, take a math test.'"

2 of 194 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Isn't it, though? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Health insurance is a way of sharing risk, a form of solidarity. It is based on the insight that nobody is at fault for certain ailments, so in a society which wants to give the same basic opportunities to everybody, it is our duty to help those who, through no fault of their own, are burdened with sickness or injury. Making people with unfavorable genetic dispositions pay a higher price for health insurance is the opposite of the purpose of health insurance.

  2. Re:This will actually reverse the cost of health c by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    >I have health insurance for BIG stuff, hence me HUGE deductible (5 figures).

    Bullshit.

    Im only 33 and need insurance. My sleep apnea machine costs a few thousand dollars. No "emergency" insurance covers that, yet SA is as serious as anything else. Toss in the sleep studies and my insurance probably paid out 6 or 8 grand. I would have lost all my savings and more if I had "emergency" insurance only.

    I used to be poorer and had no insurance and pretty much begged doctors for the "cash rate." All my medicines were samples. I barely scraped by and I got lucky. I was young and healthy. No major accidents. Now in my 30s I cannot do that. No way.

    You sure as hell are not having a baby safely by paying cash. No emergency insurance is going to cover pre-natal, delivery, post-natal, etc.

    >Wash your hands after touching sick people. Cut back on excessive drinking and smoking. Wear a condom. Don't eat too many sugars or starches. Do some exercise. It's not so hard.

    Yeah, youre a moron. I do all these things. Kids born with diabetes arent going to exercise it away. Youre not going to fix a broken leg with happy thoughts. Not eating a twinkie doesnt cure a MRSA infection. Not drinking beer doesnt fix a rotted tooth.

    >Then you can SAVE YOUR MONEY when you're young to prepare for the care you'll need when you're old.

    My dad's CPOD and Alzheimer's treatments are in the 5 digits. In 10 years its going to be well over 500,000. Thats a lot to save on top of retirement.

    How old are you? Some college student who has yet to grow up and see how your body falls apart when youre older? Its all downhere from here. If all of Europe can do national healthcare then so can we. Dont let being "college liberatarian" make you more ignorant than you already are of health matters.