
Pediatric biobanks and parents of disabled children associations opinions on establishing children repositories in developing countries
Author(s) -
Svetlana Mykolaivna Gramatiuk,
Irіna Yuriivna Bagmut,
М. І. Шеремет,
Karine Sargsyan,
Alla Mironovna Yushko,
Serhii Mykolaevich Filipchenko,
V. V. Maksymyuk,
Volodimir Volodimirovich Tarabanchuk,
П. В. Мороз,
Andriy Ivanovich Popovich
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of medicine and life
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.354
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1844-3117
pISSN - 1844-122X
DOI - 10.25122/jml-2020-0106
Subject(s) - biobank , informed consent , medicine , resource (disambiguation) , parental consent , medical education , family medicine , psychology , alternative medicine , computer science , bioinformatics , computer network , pathology , biology
Pediatric biobanks are an indispensable resource for the research needed to bring advances in personalized medicine into pediatric medical care. It is unclear how or when these advances in medical care may reach children, but it is unlikely that research in adults will be adequate. We conducted the screening for a hypothetic problem in various European and American pediatric biobanks based on online surveys through e-mail distribution based on the Biobank Economic Modeling Tool (BEMT) questionnaire model. Participants in the survey had work experience in biobanking for at least 3 years or more. Contact information about the survey participants was confirmed on the social networks profiles (LinkedIn), as well as on generally available websites. First, we tried creating a model which can show the pediatric preclinical and basic clinical phase relationship and demonstrate how pediatric biobanking is linked to this process. Furthermore, we tried to look for new trends, and the final goal is to put the acquired knowledge into practice, so medical experts and patients could gain usable benefit from it. We concluded that leading positions must take into account ethical and legal aspects when considering the decision to include children in the biobank collection. However, communication with parents and children is essential. The biobank characteristics influence the biobank's motives to include children in the consent procedure. Moreover, the motives to include children influence how the children are involved in the consent procedure and the extent to which children are able to make voluntary decisions as part of the consent procedure.