Increased awareness and decreased acceptance of genome-editing technology: The impact of the Chinese twin babies

Genome-editing technology has become increasingly known in recent years, and the 2018 news of genome-edited twins in China had a particularly significant impact on public awareness. In the present study we investigate the effect of Japanese media coverage on public opinions of this technology. To id...

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Main Authors: Daiki Watanabe, Yoko Saito, Mai Tsuda, Ryo Ohsawa, Simone Garzon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7500613/?tool=EBI
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author Daiki Watanabe
Yoko Saito
Mai Tsuda
Ryo Ohsawa
Simone Garzon
author_facet Daiki Watanabe
Yoko Saito
Mai Tsuda
Ryo Ohsawa
Simone Garzon
author_sort Daiki Watanabe
collection DOAJ
description Genome-editing technology has become increasingly known in recent years, and the 2018 news of genome-edited twins in China had a particularly significant impact on public awareness. In the present study we investigate the effect of Japanese media coverage on public opinions of this technology. To identify the effects we employ a questionnaire survey method on a pre-registered sample from online research company Macromill. Our repeated survey from 2016 through 2019 reveal a generally supportive attitude toward the medical application of genome-editing methods. To see this we employed a multinomial logit analysis examining the determinants of negative and positive impressions of the technology. Results show that although editing for medical purposes remained mostly acceptable, its use in fertilizing human eggs was increasingly rejected, especially in 2019, the most recent sample year. The suggestion is that while genome-editing applications in general medical fields are publicly accepted, its use in human functionality enhancement is heavily increasingly resisted. News of the twin babies in China did raise public awareness of the methods but also damaged their reputation. It therefore is important for genome researchers to hold such concerns in mind, keeping the public informed of changing technology fundamentals. As a related question we inquire into the public acceptability of genome editing for animal and plant breeding, such as in agriculture and fisheries, as well. We find the Japanese public views the medical and breeding applications of this technology to be unconnected with each other, despite that awareness of both has risen significantly in recent years.
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spelling doaj.art-195f35d062c34e72933c23a25bec73572022-12-21T19:03:24ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01159Increased awareness and decreased acceptance of genome-editing technology: The impact of the Chinese twin babiesDaiki WatanabeYoko SaitoMai TsudaRyo OhsawaSimone GarzonGenome-editing technology has become increasingly known in recent years, and the 2018 news of genome-edited twins in China had a particularly significant impact on public awareness. In the present study we investigate the effect of Japanese media coverage on public opinions of this technology. To identify the effects we employ a questionnaire survey method on a pre-registered sample from online research company Macromill. Our repeated survey from 2016 through 2019 reveal a generally supportive attitude toward the medical application of genome-editing methods. To see this we employed a multinomial logit analysis examining the determinants of negative and positive impressions of the technology. Results show that although editing for medical purposes remained mostly acceptable, its use in fertilizing human eggs was increasingly rejected, especially in 2019, the most recent sample year. The suggestion is that while genome-editing applications in general medical fields are publicly accepted, its use in human functionality enhancement is heavily increasingly resisted. News of the twin babies in China did raise public awareness of the methods but also damaged their reputation. It therefore is important for genome researchers to hold such concerns in mind, keeping the public informed of changing technology fundamentals. As a related question we inquire into the public acceptability of genome editing for animal and plant breeding, such as in agriculture and fisheries, as well. We find the Japanese public views the medical and breeding applications of this technology to be unconnected with each other, despite that awareness of both has risen significantly in recent years.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7500613/?tool=EBI
spellingShingle Daiki Watanabe
Yoko Saito
Mai Tsuda
Ryo Ohsawa
Simone Garzon
Increased awareness and decreased acceptance of genome-editing technology: The impact of the Chinese twin babies
PLoS ONE
title Increased awareness and decreased acceptance of genome-editing technology: The impact of the Chinese twin babies
title_full Increased awareness and decreased acceptance of genome-editing technology: The impact of the Chinese twin babies
title_fullStr Increased awareness and decreased acceptance of genome-editing technology: The impact of the Chinese twin babies
title_full_unstemmed Increased awareness and decreased acceptance of genome-editing technology: The impact of the Chinese twin babies
title_short Increased awareness and decreased acceptance of genome-editing technology: The impact of the Chinese twin babies
title_sort increased awareness and decreased acceptance of genome editing technology the impact of the chinese twin babies
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7500613/?tool=EBI
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