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Recommendations for a Dutch Sustainable Biobanking Environment
Author(s) -
Rogier van der Stijl,
Peggy Manders,
Elisabeth W. H. M. Eijdems
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
biopreservation and biobanking
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.545
H-Index - 34
eISSN - 1947-5535
pISSN - 1947-5543
DOI - 10.1089/bio.2021.0011
Subject(s) - biobank , sustainability , business , legislature , resource (disambiguation) , public relations , environmental planning , knowledge management , engineering ethics , environmental resource management , political science , engineering , computer science , geography , bioinformatics , biology , environmental science , ecology , computer network , law
Biobanks and their collections are considered essential for contemporary biomedical research and a critical resource toward personalized medicine. However, they need to operate in a sustainable manner to prevent research waste and maximize impact. Sustainability is the capacity of a biobank to remain operative, effective, and competitive over its expected lifetime. This remains a challenge given a biobank's position at the interplay of ethical, societal, scientific, and commercial values and the difficulties in finding continuous funding. In the end, biobanks are responsible for their own sustainability. Still, biobanks also depend on their surrounding environment, which contains overarching legislative, policy, financial, and other factors that can either impede or promote sustainability. The Biobanking and Biomolecular Research Infrastructure for The Netherlands (BBMRI.nl) has worked on improving the national environment for sustainable biobanking. In this article, we present the final outcomes of this BBMRI.nl project. First, we summarize the current overarching challenges of the Dutch biobanking landscape. These challenges were gathered during workshops and focus groups with Dutch biobanks and their users, for which the full results are described in separate reports. The main overarching challenges relate to sample and data quality, funding, use and reuse, findability and accessibility, and the general image of biobanks. Second, we propose a package of recommendations-across nine themes-toward creating overarching conditions that stimulate and enable sustainable biobanking. These recommendations serve as a guideline for the Dutch biobanking community and their stakeholders to jointly work toward practical implementation and a better biobanking environment. There are undoubtedly parallels between the Dutch situation and the challenges found in other countries. We hope that sharing our project's approach, outcomes, and recommendations will support other countries in their efforts toward sustainable biobanking.

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