What the FCC’s Broadband Report Means for Genomics and Personalized Medicine

The Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) National Broadband Plan was released to Congress today. (Depending on your perspective, that’s either one day ahead or 30 days behind schedule.) What, you might ask, does a broadband report prepared by an agency better known for handing out fines in the aftermath of wardrobe malfunctions have to say that could possibly interest the Genomics Law Report?

For most of the broadband plan’s 376 pages (pdf) the answer is “nothing at all.” However, Chapter 10 focuses on Health Care (pdf), with several discussions of potential relevance to the future of genomics and personalized medicine, at least in the United States. The bulk of the chapter is devoted to issues of indisputable importance – e-care, health IT, mobile and rural healthcare delivery, for instance – that will be capably covered elsewhere. (mobihealthnews, for instance, is already providing coverage of aspects of the plan that will impact mobile health care: here and here.) However, Section 10.4 (“Unlocking the Value of Data”) offers up two important themes that are relevant to how at least one government agency views the future of genomics and personalized medicine.


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Filed under Direct-to-Consumer Services, Genomic Policymaking, Genomics & Society, Pending Regulation