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Genetic screening and ethnic minorities.
(Sage, 1999)
No theory of 'race' and ethnicity is without serious practical drawbacks for effecting selective screening for haemoglobin disorders. Universal screening raises issues about consent, resources, and eugenicist representation ...
Midwives' and senior student midwives' knowledge of haemoglobinopathies in England.
(Churchill-Livingstone, 1996)
Objective: To examine midwives' and senior student midwives' knowledge concerning sickle cell anaemia and beta-thalassaemia.
Design: Survey using the Dyson Questionnaires.
Setting: Study days on 26 sites across England ...
Haemoglobinopathies, antenatal screening and the midwife.
(Mark Allen, 1996)
Key Points
Lack of national enforceable and funded standards for screening for the haemoglobinopathies means that a great deal of discretion is devolved to the individual midwife.
Naive conceptions of ‘race’ and lack of ...
'Race', ethnicity and haemoglobin disorders
(Elsevier, 1998)
The new genetics has brought forth concerns that such developments as screening for genetic
diseases will accentuate the oppression of minority ethnic groups [Bradby (1996) Genetics and racism.
In The Troubled Helix: ...