Abstract

It is conceivable that in the near future a family could present themselves to their health care provider and request to be tested for diseases X, Y, and Z, equipped only with a web page listing of disease-causing genes. The testing of children suggests subtle and controversial inherent conflicts, however. Decisions about whether to provide genetic testing become increasingly murky for a health care professional as the requests advance from testing a child for carrier status for an autosomal recessive disorder, to testing a girl for a sex-linked mutation, to testing an asymptomatic child for a susceptibility to a particular disorder. Although no single case can exemplify every variable and circumstance confronting health care professionals today, this case-based discussion of x-linked severe combined immune deficiency can serve as a framework to examine some of the potential dilemmas surrounding the testing of children for genetic disorders.

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