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Attitudes of Costa Rican individuals towards donation of personal genetic data for research

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Chavarría Soley, Gabriela
Francis Cartín, María Fernanda
Jiménez González, Fabiola Estefanía
Ávila Aguirre, Alejandro
Castro Gómez, María José
Robarts, Lauren
Middleton, Anna
Raventós Vorst, Henriette

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We explore attitudes from the public in Costa Rica regarding willingness to donate DNA data for research. Materials & methods: A total of 224 Costa Rican individuals answered the anonymous online survey 'Your DNA, Your Say'. It covers attitudes toward DNA and medical data donation, trust in research professionals and concerns about consequences of reidentification. Results & conclusion: Most individuals (89%) are willing to donate their information for research purposes. When confronted with different potential uses of their data, participants are significantly less likely to donate data to for-profit researchers (34% willingness to donate). The most frequently cited concerns regarding donation of genetic data relate to possible discrimination by health/life insurance companies and employers. For the participants in the survey, the most trusted professionals are their own medical doctor and nonprofit researchers from their country. This is the first study regarding attitudes toward genetic data donation in Costa Rica.

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attitudes, data sharing, donation, genomics, survey, genetic data

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