China uses prenatal blood test to collect genetic data from millions of women worldwide

Bogeyman 

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A Chinese company is using a prenatal Down's syndrome test developed with the country's military to collect genetic data from millions of women.

BGI Group, China's largest genomics firm, collaborated with the People's Liberation Army (PLA) to create the blood test taken in early pregnancy to detect foetal abnormalities, Reuters found.

Data collected can be shared when it is "directly relevant to national security or national defence security", according to the test's privacy policy.

Genetic information about the foetus and mother, including personal details such as the mother's height, weight, medical history and country of origin (but not name) could be made available to Chinese security agencies.

China's access to large amounts of genetic data, giving it insight into population traits, could push it towards increased economic and military domination.

Experts warn it could help China gain a monopoly over pharmaceuticals, lead to soldiers being genetically enhanced, and result in the engineering of pathogens to be used as weapons of war.

So far, 8.4 million women have taken BGI's test, branded as NIFTY, worldwide. It is among the world's top-selling non-invasive prenatal tests (NIPT) and is sold in 52 countries, including New Zealand.

Other NIPT companies also reuse data collected during testing for research. Scientists and ethicists have said the scale of BGI's operations and its links to the military are concerning.

Antenatal Results and Choices, a British charity for parents, said mothers-to-be would be "horrified" to think their data could be used for nefarious purposes.

"This is concerning," said a spokesman. "When women sign a consent form for use of their data after a prenatal test, their expectation is that such use will be within legitimate and ethically sound clinical research. Most would be horrified if it was being used for politically motivated or even military purposes."
 

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