A New Initiative for Genomics Policy and Society
ELSI 2.0 aims to stimulate creativity, communication and collaboration on genomic research and policy. Built as an online workspace open to all potential users, it provides opportunities to be involved and to contribute to policy and practice domestically, regionally and internationally.
ELSI 2.0 also seeks to provide information on research resources and prospective projects, work spaces for online collaboration. It includes educational webinars and workshops, and as well it supports strategic activities including: reviews and meta-analyses of ELSI research and policy; development of foresight papers; rapid response action teams to advise on specific issues; international memos for identifying emerging policy issues and priorities, and modelling exercises for the construction of international frameworks and approaches
ELSI 2.0 will make it easy for an ELSI scholar in Africa to connect with other scholars around the world or to tap into resources not otherwise readily available. For a U.S.-based advocacy organization, the Collaboratory will provide essential services to extend the reach of work otherwise locked up in the academic literature. A funder in the European Union could request a rapid response team to respond to ad hoc, short-notice requests related to emerging issues or to forecast important policy directions. A patient could become an active participant in ELSI research or find literature and experts on subjects such as direct-to-consumer testing. For a scholar in Asia looking to fund a multicountry effort, the Collaboratory could help identify funding sources, collaborators, and workshops for the idea. Scholars could choose to be observers or builders and creators (posing projects for a workspace or a crowd-sourced effort) or to motivate collaborators who would not otherwise be accessible (clinicians, patients, policy-makers). In this way, ELSI 2.0 will continually build and support global ELSI research and policy-making capacity.
The full paper can be read at www.sciencemag.org.
The following meetings have been held:
Geneva, November 2011
Rotterdam June 2012
Kyoto January 2013
Montreal 2013
Geneva, November 013
London, February 2014
Oxford, November 2014
Oxford, June 2015
Toulouse, December 2015
Osaka, November 2017
Join the ELSI2.0 maillist to share relevant articles, seminars, conferences, job positions etc with an international audience of over 300 members. Simply email helex@dph.ox.ac.uk with your interest to be added to the maillist.
We are looking for ways to get people and centres involved. Come and join us in this exciting endeavor! https://elsi2workspace.tghn.org
Building a national genome centre - citizen and policy perspectives
Dr Karoliina Snell, University of Helsinki, Finland
Thursday 23 November at 1pm (UTC/UK time/2pm CET)
GENOMICS ENGLAND
IDENTIFYING AND ADDRESSING ETHICS AND GOVERNANCE ISSUES IN THE UK’S 100,000 GENOMES PROJECT
Professor Mike Parker, Director of The Ethox Centre, University of Oxford
Monday 23 January
(Presentation with slides end at 21:00 - then lines opened for questions)
The recording is available for downloading here.
SHARING GENETIC DATA FOR INDIVIDUAL CARE : CONSENT & CONFIDENTIALITY
Dr Mark Taylor, University of Sheffield
21st February 2017 at 12.30
Due to an early bug in the system, Dr Mark Taylor’s slides were unable to be saved in conjunction with his presentation, however they are attached for you to review whilst viewing/listening to his presentation. Webinar Slides
THE 100,000 GENOMES PROJECT: OBSERVATIONS FROM WITHIN A GENOMIC MEDICINE CENTRE
Dr Leigh Jackson, South West Genomic Medicine Centre.
Wednesday 22 March 2017 13:00 - 14:00 GMT
NEGOTIATING ETHICAL PRACTICE WHEN CLINICAL CARE DEPENDS ON BIG-DATA RESEARCH
Dr Sandi Dheensa, University of Southampton
Tuesday 18th April 2017 13:00 - 14:00 GMT
Presentation slides and the recording are available to download.
CONSENT AND CONFIDENTIALITY IN GENETIC MEDICINE, DOES CLINICAL PRACTICE NEED TO ADAPT?
Professor Anneke Lucassen, University of Southampton
Tuesday 23rd May 2017 13:00 - 14:00 GMT
Webinar available on request - please email Imogen Holbrook.
PERSONALISED MEDICINE
FROM PERSONALISED TO ‘PRECISION’ MEDICINE
Professor Barbara Prainsack, King's College London
Tuesday 28 April from 13:00 - 14:00 GMT
Webinar available on request - please email Imogen Holbrook.
PERSONALISED MEDICINE: CHALLENGES FOR HEALTH DATA GOVERNANCE
Dr Mark Taylor, University of Sheffield
Thursday 18th May 13:00 - 14:00 GMT
THE IMPLEMENTATION OF PERSONALISED MEDICINE IN THE UK
Rob Hastings, Principal, Precision Medicine Catapult, POSTPONED from
Wednesday 15th June 13:00 - 14:00 GMT. New date available soon.
PATIENT AND INTEREST ORGANISATIONS’ VIEWS ON PERSONALISED MEDICINE
Isabelle Budin Ljosne, Norwegian Institute of Public Health
Wednesday 5 July 13:00 - 14:00 GMT
FROM PRECISION MEDICINE TO ‘ALL OF US’: ADDRESSING THE NEEDS OF UNDERSERVED POPULATIONS
All of Us programme
Tuesday 29th August 13:00 - 14:00 GMT
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
PSYCHO-SOCIO-ECONOMIC CHALLENGES ON THALASSEMIC PATIENTS: SHARING PROM PERIPHERAL REGION
Monday 15th May 14:00 Western Indonesian Time (or 8am in the UK)
The Indonesian Thalassemia Team (Purwokerto, Indonesia) include Dyah Woro Dwi Lestari, Dinar Faiza, Lantip Rujito, Joko Setyono & Abdul Aziz Suparno.
Presentation Slides available here. No recording available - our apologies.
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT WITH THE NATIONAL CENTRE FOR INDIGENOUS GENOMICS
Professor Emma Kowal, Deakin University
Tuesday 23rd May at 6pm Melbourne, Australia (9am in the UK on the same day)
The recording is available for downloading here.
Check the Global timings here.
Planning Committee to date:
Jane Kaye, University of Oxford, UK, Eric M. Meslin, Indiana University, USA, Bartha M.Knoppers McGill University, Montreal, CAN,Eric T. Juengst, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA; Anne Cambon-Thomsen, Université Paul Sabatier Toulouse, France; Donald Chalmers, University of Tasmania, Australia; Jantina De Vries,University of Cape Town, South Africa; Kelly Edwards, University of Washington, USA; Nils Hoppe, Leibniz Universitaet Hannover, Germany; Alastair Kent, Genetic Alliance UK; Clement Adebamowo, University of Ibadan, Nigeria; Patricia Marshall, Case Western Reserve University, USA; Kazuto Kato, Kyoto University, Japan.