This paper addresses practical and ethical considerations regarding genetic tests
to predict performance and/or risk of exercise-related injury or illness. Various
people might wish to conduct sport-related genetic tests for a variety of
reasons. For example, an individual might seek personal genetic information to
help guide their own sport participation. A sports coach might wish to test young
athletes to aid team selection or individualize training. A physician might want
to predict the risk of injury or illness in athletes and advise regarding
selection or preventative measures. An insurance company might seek to estimate
the risk of career-threatening injury for athletes based partly on genetic
information. Whilst this information is, in part, encoded in our DNA sequence,
the available tests allow generally only a poor prediction of the aforementioned
variables. In other words, the current genetic tests and analysis methods are not
powerful enough to inform important decisions in sport to a substantial degree.
It is particularly disappointing that more than half of the commercially
available genetic tests related to exercise and sport do not appear to identify
publicly the genetic variants they assess, making scrutiny by academic scholars
and consumers (or their representatives) impossible. There are also challenging
ethical issues to consider. For example, the imposition of genetic tests on
individuals (especially young people) by third parties is potentially susceptible
to abuse. Scientists and practitioners should understand the limitations of the
tests currently available, the ethical concerns and the importance of counselling
before and after testing so that they are only used in a responsible manner.
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This paper addresses practical and ethical considerations regarding genetic tests
to predict performance and/or risk of exercise-related injury or illness. Various
people might wish to conduct sport-related genetic tests for a variety of
reasons. For example, an individual might seek personal genetic information to
help guide their own sport participation. A sports coach might wish to test young
athletes to aid team selection or individualize training. A physician might want
to predict th...
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