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Speech by
Secretary of State for Health (Alan Milburn) at the Institute of Human Genetics,
International Centre for Life, Newcastle upon Tyne, 19th April 2001
"It
is a real pleasure to be with you today both to celebrate the achievements of
the Northern Genetics Service and to welcome the new Institute of Human
Genetics. You already provide services that are renowned nationally as well as
regionally. Now thanks to all your efforts and the investments going in you will
be able to provide world-class genetic services for patients. Hardly
a week goes by without a new media story about genetics. Some of the advances we
read about no doubt are more apparent than real. But one thing is for certain,
genetics will, indeed already is changing the world in which we live - holding
out the potential for new drugs and therapies, new means of preventing ill
health and new ways of treating illness. And
yet, despite the profound potential inherent in the new technologies, it is rare
for any health secretary to speak about genetics. In part this reticence
reflects uncertainty about the impact genetic advances will have on health care.
In part it reflects -unease about the ethical implications of some of these
great steps forward. We have to get to grips with both. In
the process, we should not lose sight of what I am convinced are enormously
exciting developments for human health. Late last year I convened a seminar on
genetics in the Department of Health. Patient groups, doctors, leading
scientists, the pharmaceutical industry and some of our country's top
geneticists attended. I learned a lot about both the potential and the problems
associated with developments in genetics. What I heard convinced me that it is
time for politicians and the public as well as scientists and clinicians to
engage with the issue. Any
responsible government has a duty to assess the future challenges facing the
country. Our horizon must be beyond the short term. We need now to be looking a
decade or more ahead so we can ensure Britain is in the best position to benefit
from the changes that will surely come. Whether
Britain prepares for it or not, advances in genetics will inevitably impact on
health services and health prospects. The challenge for us is how best to ensure
the impact is as positive as it will be profound; that it benefits all of our
society, not just some of it. I
am no expert on genetics. I am a politician not a scientist. So what I want to
say is less about the science of genetics - and more about the impact it can
have. I
want to set out:
We
have I before us a huge potential. A gift that modern science has bequeathed
medicine and society. The breakthroughs initiated by Francis Crick and Jim
Watson five decades ago and taken forward by teams of scientists throughout the
world in the human genome project have given us not only new knowledge about
life itself but the potential power to improve life. The
human genome project has already crossed a new frontier in scientific knowledge
- the question now is whether we can harness that knowledge to cross a new
frontier in medicine. The
implications of the advances in genetic knowledge are enormous - equal
potentially for the conquest of disease to the discovery of antibiotics This is
a revolution, with the potential in the first halt of this century to dwarf the
impact computer technology had on society in the second half of the last
century. In
time we should be able to assess the risk an individual has of developing
disease - not just for single gene disorders like cystic fibrosis but for our
country's biggest killers - cancer and coronary heart disease - as well as those
like diabetes which limit people's lives. We
will be able to better predict the likelihood of an individual responding to a
particular course of drug treatment. And down the line, we will be able to
develop new therapies which hold out the prospect not just of treating disease
but of preventing it. Of
course it is a complex business turning new knowledge into new treatment For one
thing, the relationship between gene and environment is currently insufficiently
understood. So no-one can predict right now the scale of the impact of genetics
on health care, any more than we can predict its timing. There are no
guarantees. It is worth remembering: people of my generation grew up being told
that by now we would be certain there would be men on Mars - either because we'd
gone there or they'd got here first. What
makes advances in genetic medicine different is they are already happening. Some
genetic tests are currently available. Many more are within reach. There are
promising signs from pioneering gene therapy treatments. Some new drugs are
already being designed for specific groups in the population who can benefit
most. Indeed, most experts agree the biggest advance we are likely to see in
genetics in the near future lies in the discovery of hundreds of new, better
targeted drug treatments. There
is no "Big Bang". Instead, we are at the start of a "slow
burn" which can only accelerate in the future. Our job is to prepare for
change to harness the benefits of genetic advances and avoid its dangers. To do
that we need to secure public approval for progress and to actively prepare our
health care system for that progress. .I now want to deal with each of these
issues in turn. First
then, the views of the British public. Most of us in this room can already see
the potential for healing which genetics may bring. Yet the subject evokes
strong public scepticism, sometimes even hostility. A
MORI survey just last month showed that while 9 in 10 people agreed genetic
developments could have positive health benefits, one third worried that
research on human genetics amounts to tampering with nature. The creation of
Dolly the sheep and false claims about the cloning of humans have understandably
exacerbated these fears. Little
wonder then, that there remains some confusion in the public mind about where
the science of genetics ends and the nightmare of eugenics begins. The
pre-condition for dispelling some of the myths and ending much of the confusion
is better engagement between the medical and scientific communities and society
as a whole. Government and the media share a responsibility to help foster a
well-informed, national debate about the promise and the problems genetic
discoveries hold out for our country in the years to come. Many
of I advances we are likely to see in genetics over the next decade will
probably come in areas which are the least likely to raise profound moral
concerns - such as pharmaco-genetics. But
in a climate where the benefits of scientific advance are not always as
automatically accepted as once they were, we need to move beyond simply
stimulating a national debate about genetics. It is unfortunate but true that
BSE and other developments have inflicted real damage on the standing of
science. In some spheres there is the risk of an anti-science view taking hold.
To protect against that prospect we need to move beyond simply providing more
information or better education to the public about the potential of genetics.
We have to provide positive safeguards to address the public's concerns. The
terrible lesson of history is that science can be claimed for evil as well as
for good. So whilst science must be able to discover the facts, Governments - on
behalf of the public - must be able to make judgements about the use to which
those discoveries can legitimately be put. Advances
in genetics raise difficult ethical questions. Most peoples I guess, world
accept as a good thing genetic testing for susceptibility to heart disease in
order to be better able to prevent it. The same positive view would probably
apply if we were able to tailor drugs to treat a particular individual for
serious illness or if we could cure cancer by altering the make-up of a
particular gene. Conversely, the prospect of genetically designing babies for
their looks or for their intelligence is, for most people, repellent. At
present in this country, human reproductive cloning is banned because the Human
Fertilisation and Embryology Authority will not license it. The ban is welcome. But
I believe we need to go further to offer an unequivocal assurance to There
are huge potential health gains in genetic advances but until we address and
allay public concerns we will not gain public consent to realise the full
benefits of genetic science. We
have made a start with the Human Genetics Commission to provide independent
advice on the social, ethical and legal implications, There are
understandable public concerns that the advent of genetic testing will lead to
new forms of discrimination - in employment or insurance for example. The extent
to which the public accept, demand or avoid genetic screening services in the
future will depend in part on who will have access to genetic information. There
are important issues of confidentiality to be addressed. The Commission is
currently exploring some of them, most notably in regard to insurance. We have
also set up the Genetics and Insurance Committee to review the evidence about
individual tests. The House of Commons Science and Technology Committee recently
reported on the same issue. It called for a temporary moratorium on using
genetic tests for insurance purposes to give time for the wider implications to
be explored. The
question of whether insurance companies should have access to genetic
information has provoked much public concern. There are powerful arguments for
not treating genetic information the same as other kinds of information for
insurance purposes. Right now the relevance of many genetic test results is
still poorly understood. Many tests can only indicate an individual has a
predisposition to develop a condition not a certainty that they will. Even so
forced disclosure of test results could deter some people from taking tests at
all, potentially putting their health at risk for fear of suffering
discrimination by insurance companies or even by employers. In the longer term
the danger we need to guard against is e creation of a 'genetic underclass',
where high risk individual are excluded altogether. These
are complex issues and it is for these reasons that the Government has asked the
Human Genetics Commission to review the wider social and ethical aspects of the
current policy on the use of genetic test results for insurance. We await their
report and recommendations. Clearly the report is likely to give rise to a
number of long term issues that will need careful consideration. What
I can say today is that the Government will look sympathetically at any
proposals to prevent the inappropriate use of genetic information for insurance
purposes, including legislation if necessary. If the Human Genetics Commission
recommends a temporary moratorium on the use of genetic tests by the insurance
industry then we will pursue it. There
will need to be safeguards to protect individuals from families affected by
genetic conditions such as Huntingdon's disease. I will therefore consult with
genetic support groups and the insurance industry to examine what can be done to
improve matters for those whose family history makes insurance difficult. As
the debate on insurance and genetics is revealing, genetic advances require new
thought to be given to regulation nationally and internationally. In truth,
scientific advance has outstripped the existing regulatory response. Without
appropriate regulation, lack of public confidence will remain a significant
barrier to fully harnessing the health benefits genetic developments represent. Genetic
advances can be a force for good. But that requires more than just public
confidence. It requires active preparation. The genetics revolution has begun.
It will only move forward faster in the futures. It is time we a nation started
preparing today for the opportunities of tomorrow. Let me now set out then the
preparations I believe the NHS must now make. Whether
it is genetic testing or pharmacogenetics or, in time, developments in gene
therapy, the genetics revolution is going to make the NHS of the future look
very different from the health service of today. Developments
in genetics should allow us to eradicate much of the trial and error common in
medical practice. Much of the health service’s work today is based on a model
which aims to 'diagnose and treat' conditions. Modern medicine has made great
strides forward. But much of it still only comes into play relatively late in
the history of an illness. Developments in genetics should allow us to test or
screen for risk factors long before the symptoms of disease develop. The NHS of
the future should increasingly allow us to 'predict and prevent' the common
diseases of later life. Genetics
will never mean a disease-free existence; but understanding of genetics could
eventually help to free society from some of today's major diseases. The plans
my department are currently discussing with the Wellcome Trust and the Medical
Research Council for one of the world's largest studies - involving 500,000
volunteers - into the interaction between genes and environment will give us
further vital clues. To
realise the potential genetic advances could have, however, the NHS will need to
change the services it offers. Hospitals might do less invasive surgery but more
gene therapy treatment. Overall the NHS will need to gear itself increasingly to
prevention and not just treatment. In primary care where the majority of
patients will be seen, the pattern of care will alter, as new services take the
place of existing ones: more genetic screening alongside more specialist genetic
counselling; more regular check-ups; more help for people to give up smoking not
just advice that they should; more exercise on prescription alongside drugs on
prescription, tailored to the individual's personal genetic profile. Patients,
of course, must be able to choose how best they as individuals can benefit from
these genetic advances. People have a right to know and a right not to know
information about their own health. For genetic tests, the rate of take-up will
inevitably depend on factors such as family health history and the possibility
of treatment. There will be huge dilemmas for the individual patient - as women
who are at high risk from breast cancer have already found after deciding
whether or not to have a genetic test. But overall, I believe genetic
developments should give patients more control and more choice over their own
health. The
role of health professionals will be to help patients choose what is right for
them. There will be a greater emphasis on providing clear information to
patients so they can make informed choices. Informed consent should be the
governing principle here, with a greater raise of partnership between
professional and patient. Genetic
services will spread out of specialist centres into GP surgeries, health centres
and local hospitals as I know you are now doing here in the North East.
A new generation of specialist primary care professionals are likely to
develop to work alongside family doctors - and help relieve the burden on them -
by specialising in genetic testing, advice and counselling. Mainstream genetic
services in the NHS will also require big changes in how we educate and train
health professionals. There
is then a lot of preparation to do. Day-by-day we are seeing advances which
could offer more patients the benefits of genetic services. Today for, example,
I am able to announce agreement between my department and the Cancer Research
Campaign for the use of their world class research to support testing for the
presence of breast cancer genes. The
CRC has held a patent on the detection of one of the breast cancer genes for
some time. Such a patent could have made it prohibitively expensive for the NHS
to test women for this gene if the CRC had used their patent powers to impose a
charge. The agreement we have reached with the CRC ensures that women will not
face this problem – so incidentally giving the lie to the claim that some have
made that genetic patenting inevitably will land the NHS with unaffordable
costs. I can also say today that discussions are underway with a leading United
States-based biotechnology company, Myriad Genetics Inc, to enable NHS patients
to benefit from the company's extensive research and development on a related
breast cancer gene. I hope these discussions will be a model for future
collaborations with our health service. These
advances, however, inevitably place great strain on NHS genetic services. I want
to pay tribute not only to the work that John and his team do here in Newcastle
but to the work of our regional genetic services up and down the country. You
already provide vital - sometimes life-saving services for thousands of people
with single gene disorders. You are at the sharp end of the genetics revolution
- a revolution with the potential to transform health care in our country but
which must not be allowed to overwhelm it. Here
in Britain we start with a great advantage. Despite the very real pressures our
genetic services are under, they are the envy of Europe. A recent study in the
European Journal of Genetics concludes that the UK and the Netherlands provide
our continent's most comprehensive genetic services. According
to the Nuffield Trust no other country in the World provides a service which
offers combined strengths in clinical, laboratory and research activities. When
it comes to genetic services it is no exaggeration to say the NHS is a world
leader. Now it is time to enhance the capacity of our genetic services so they
are better able to capture advances in genetic medicine for many more NHS
patients. Today
I can announce a £30 million package of new investment in NHS genetic services. Firstly
the government will increase the number of consultants specialising in genetics.
The NHS is in the midst of major expansion, after decades of neglect and
under-investment. Already there are more 17,000 nurses and 6,500 more doctors
than when we came to office. The next few years will see further expansion
still. Genetic services will be a major beneficiary, Consultants numbers will
double from 77 today to over 140 by 2006. Secondly,
we will also double the number of scientific and technical staff working in
genetics over the next five years to provide the specialist laboratory skills
needed to maximise benefits to patients. Staff numbers will rise by 300. Thirdly,
we will more than double the number of genetic counsellors working in the NHS
not only in specialist units but in primary care as well. There will be at least
an extra 150 posts and we will work closely with Macmillan Cancer Relief to
develop more specialist genetic cancer counsellors. Fourthly,
we will create two new national reference laboratories for genetics specialising
in rare genetic disorders and identifying new tests and treatments that can
bring benefits to patients. Fifthly,
we will address the lottery in care in genetics services. As the Bobrow report
recommended, we will now, for the first time, form our regional genetics
services into a single national network capable of providing specialist services
to groups of patients regardless of where they happen to live. The creation of a
Genetics Commissioning Advisory Group involving patient representatives under
the chairmanship of Sir John Pattison will also ensure greater national
co-ordination of genetic services. More
consultants, more scientists, more counsellors, new laboratories and a new
national network of specialist genetics centres - a five point plan for
expansion in genetic services - will allow the NHS to offer greatly enhanced I
treatment and care for patients. The
number of NHS patients being seen by specialist genetics services will increase
by 80% to 120,000 a year over the course of the next few years. More NHS
patients with common conditions like cancer, as well as those with single gene
disorders will be offered tests. Regional centres will be able to routinely see
the family members of patients so they also have the information and the tests
necessary to make decisions about their own future treatment needs. Waiting
times to see a genetics specialist will fall from, as long as twelve This
is the first tranche of investment we will be making to ensure the NHS is able
to offer patients the benefits of the latest genetics advances. Further
investment will be needed in education and training for staff and in IT systems
as well as in new equipment. I know that in this region funding for genetic
services will expand by one quarter over the next three years alone. The
investment we are making is not just a signal of our belief that these advances
hold out real health care benefits, but is confirmation of our belief that the
NHS is uniquely placed to maximise those benefits for all. Some
argue that the costs of absorbing these advances will swamp the NHS. That is not
my view. Of course there will be up front costs if the NHS is to spread the
benefits of genetic developments. But, down the line, there could be significant
financial gains to put alongside major health gains. For example, using genetic
profiling to more accurately prescribe drugs will reduce side-effects, improve
treatment outcomes, and save the NHS a small fortune. Advances in pharmacogenetics
could reduce the estimated 1 in 20 of hospital admissions which result from
adverse drug reactions and currently cost the NHS anywhere between £1 billion
and £2.5 billion a year. Similarly, once we are able to identify say, the 10%
of people most at risk from heart disease we will be able to provide them with
extra preventive services. One estimate puts the costs of doing so at around £60
million with the savings at around £200 million. There
is no other health care system better placed to harness the potential of the
great advances now within reach than the National Health Service. The way the
NHS is organised - providing care for all on the basis of need, not ability to
pay - uniquely suits it to capturing the benefits of genetics for the good of
all. Our
nation's health service is our best defence against the nightmare vision of a
'Brave New World' of two tier health care, a "genetic superclass' of the
well and insurable; and a "genetic underclass" of the unwell and
uninsurable, unable to pay the premiums for medical care. Britain's
system of socialised health care means citizens can choose to take genetic,
tests free from the fear that should they test positive they face an enormous
bill for insurance or treatment. Worse still that they are priced out of care or
cover altogether. Already in America developments in genetics have stirred
precisely these concerns. Genetic
advances lay bare the fallacy that private health insurance is the way forward
for our country. Genetics strengthens, rather than weakens the case for
Britain's NHS. We
in this country have good reason to be confident of being able to harness the
benefits of genetic advance for all our citizens, rather than just a privileged
few: the NHS, funded by all and there for all; genetic services, already among
the best in the world, and now to be enhanced; and on top of this international
strengths in science, education and industry. We
have in this country some of the best scientists, academics and universities
anywhere in the world. The Government's Medical Research Council and the
Wellcome Trust were responsible for a major funding contribution to the human
genome project. Over half of all European gene therapy clinical research now
takes place in Britain. The UK is home to world beating pharmaceutical
companies. Our biotechnology industries have more drugs in late stage clinical
trials than the rest of Europe put together. And - with the sole exception of
the USA - growth in investment in pharmaceutical research and development
outstrips the rest of the World. The
Government wants to see British science leading the World so there is growing
investment from the public purse too. Tax reforms -including new incentives for
research and development - will help entrench further investment still. Already
the science budget is receiving unprecedented increases. The Research Councils
are now spending £600 million a 3 car on biotechnology and medical R&D.
Spending on genomics is set to rise by at least £60 million a year. These
are huge advantages for our country. If properly harnessed, we can reap a double
benefit: prosperity for our country's economy and progress for our country's
health. We can now go on to pool these advantages to realise the economic and
health gains genetic developments could bring. The
NHS plan we published last summer set out our intention to establish a number of
genetic knowledge parks. Today I want to tell you what they will look like and
how they will work. The
knowledge parks will bring together on a single site clinicians, scientists,
academics and industrial researchers. They will be centres of clinical and
scientific excellence seeking to improve the diagnosis, treatment and
counselling of patients. Research will help create successful spin out companies
specialising in genetic technologies. Developing research and industrial
clusters of this sort has already produced enormous gains in the IT sector both
in this country and abroad. Where we have seen the development of a silicon
valley in the past we can now develop a genetics valley in the future. Indeed
with the UK's academic industrial and clinical strength we should aim to have
more than one of them. Nor should these knowledge parks be a cold scientific or
clinical environment. As here at the Centre for Life, I want them to have an
open educational ethos engaging in information and debate with the public about
both the science and ethics of genetics. In
the last months we have had preliminary discussions with a number of potential
partners to develop the first genetics knowledge parks. The Economic and Social
Research Council is interested in a joint venture on the personal, social and
ethical issues. We are discussing a joint investment with the Medical Research
Council on bioinformatics. One of the UK's major pharmaceutical companies has
agreed in principle to collaborate on a genetics park. A number of universities
are keen to participate too. Stephen
Byers, the Secretary of State for Trade & Industry, is working with me to
ensure the new parks contribute to the government's regional economic policy
agenda. I want some of the genetic knowledge parks to strengthen the economies
of regions which traditionally have lead, lower levels of research and
development, lower indigenous company formation and fewer industries of the
future. There
is enormous potential here. We need to act quickly if the UK is to maximise the
comparative advantage we currently enjoy against growing global competition. I
can therefore announce today, in addition the £30 million for the NHS, a new
£1O million fund - the Genetics Knowledge Challenge Fund - to establish
up to four knowledge parks in England over the next few years. Some
of the new Genetics Knowledge Parks may be based in existing centres. 0thers
will be new centres altogether. In the near future I will be inviting bids from
universities, regional development agencies, NHS Trusts and private sector firms
who have formed collaborative ventures to develop proposals for genetics
knowledge parks. I expect to give the go-ahead to the first tranche of genetics
knowledge parks before the end of the year. What
I believe is now needed is a major national effort to put Britain at the leading
edge of new genetics services and new genetic technologies. We should be cashing
in on the dominance we as a country currently enjoy. But that can only happen if
we prepare for change and if -we ensure that the public have confidence in those
changes. I
have tried today to set out how I think we can take the Genetics agenda forward
in terms of public safeguards, service enhancements, economic developments. As
with any new science we are in uncharted territory. The response of some is to
turn their back on genetic advances. To say that the implications are too big or
too difficult to contemplate. To leave it to chance, to others, or to the whim
of the market. I believe that would be a profound mistake for Britain. The
developments we are seeing have the capacity to bring so much good to so many
people. But I recognise there is much to do if that latent potential is to be
realised. I have touched on some of the crucial issues today. I do not pretend
to have covered all the questions, let alone given all the answers. More work
and more consideration, more public information and debate is necessary. So
I can announce today that next year, we will publish a Government Green Paper on
genetics - the first of its kind. It will examine in depth the ethical,
clinical, scientific and economic issues. It will build on the work undertaken
by government, parliamentary committees, the Human Genetics Commission, research
councils, charities and others. There
are many points of view on genetics. I want the Green Paper to be a focus for
them - and to be informed by a spectrum of views and interests including patient
groups, the wider community, the NHS, science and the pharmaceutical industries.
I am therefore establishing an advisory panel made up of representatives from
these interests to look at some of the issues the Green Paper will need to
cover. The panel will be led by Lord Turnberg, the former President of the Royal
College of Physicians, who has, I am delighted to say, agreed to chair it. I
believe the Green Paper will help stimulate a real national debate on the future
benefits of genetics for our country. But the new frontier of genetic science
and medicine recognises no boundaries between regions or nations: the clinical
and ethical issues which genetic discoveries raise will be global. Britain has
to maintain and enhance its position as a leading world player in the
development and application of genetic technologies. And
so, as part of the preparation of the Genetics Green Paper, Britain is to host
an International Conference on Genetic Medicine bringing together the world's
leading experts, to provide a global perspective on these issues. Genetics
presents a new frontier for the future of medicine and health care. The NHS
should face that future with confidence. I believe Britain's health service is
in a stronger position to secure the benefits of the genetics revolution for our
people than any private alternative. Better able to establish the trust of its
people, Better equipped to translate scientific discovery into clinical,
success. Better positioned to exploit the potential of genetic testing for all
our population rather than see genetic testing leading to exploitation of some
in our population. If
the NHS prepares for it - as we are determined it shall - the genetics
revolution will make the case for a health service based on clinical need and
not ability to pay. The values of the NHS will be invaluable as the full scope
of this new science reveals itself. That is why I say today, properly prepared,
the development of genetic medicine will make, not break the NHS. Our
task is to prepare the NHS properly. To set boundaries beyond which science will
not go but, as we have with stem cell research, to break down barriers to get
the best for patients. To involve the public and invest the public finances in
new technologies and new treatments which can help to improve the National
Health Service and our nation's health prospects. Above all, our task now is to
determine how best we can harness the potential of genetics for the benefit of
all our people and for all parts of our country.
This
is the challenge of genetics. It provides an enormous opportunity for our
country. Received
BSHG website office: 26.APR.2001 15:02
NO.636 Source:
Genetics Secretariat, |
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