Should you make ‘life plan’ based on all your genetic risks?

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Lee and his wife are the first patients of Dan Carlin to have their entire genome mapped. Lee has been reading about mapping for some time. After watching the cost fall from millions of dollars to single-digit thousands of dollars, he approached Carlin, the founder of WorldClinic and a pioneer in digital health care delivery, with the idea of having his own genome mapped, a step he saw as an essential investment in his family’s health.

Like Lee and his wife, every person has about 3.2 billion base pairs of genes, out of which 99.9 percent are the same. The other 0.1 percent represents the differences in how people look and act, their unique traits and what their health risks are. Those are the genes that are analyzed and interpreted by highly trained geneticists.

A common reaction is for people to be afraid to know what diseases and conditions they may be genetically predisposed to, such as Alzheimer’s disease. But Dr. Brandon Colby and Carlin say knowing can be lifesaving.

Read full, original post: Making a life plan based on your DNA

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