• Mashup Score: 1

    This comment explores ethical aspects in developing and testing minimal-risk devices, such as wearables and biomedical sensors. Authors outline the process of independent review, emphasizing the different levels of review depending on the research design and risk level. They also share examples of practical scenarios, highlighting key ethical considerations.

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    • Important review of #bioethics considerations for researchers developing/testing min-risk devices that interface w/ people, e.g., wearables & biomed sensors, in an era of decentralized trials. Work of @anna_wexler & @emily_a_largent. #MedTwitter #QuoteHer https://t.co/GN3oVV229o

  • Mashup Score: 3

    Bioethicist Nita Farahany says privacy law hasn’t kept up with science as employers increasingly use neurotechnology in the workplace

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    • “There is no existing set of #legal rights that protect us from employers scanning the #brain or hacking the brain," says @NitaFarahany, a bioethicist studying #braintracking in the workplace https://t.co/66Oyq3CmoU @WSJ #ethics #bioethics #privacy #employment #AI #surveillance

  • Mashup Score: 0

    Kathleen Folbigg has spent 19 years in prison and was dubbed ‘Australia’s worst female serial killer’. Now, an inquiry into her case will look at clinical genetics in a whole new way.

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    • Opening a #Genomics Pandora's box: She was convicted of killing her 4 children. Could a #gene #mutation set her free? @Nature https://t.co/4f2RmIefcD https://t.co/MZcCr0SyGC #Calmoulin #channels #CALM2 #Calmodulinopathy #Infanticide #circumstantial #Bioethics/#Law: @NitaFarahany https://t.co/qWp9BnUCWE