The FDA just forced 23andme to shut down the medical information they were giving me, tailored to my genome. What's the cost in lives of delaying the genomic revolution in health care 5 to 10 years?
It's not clear that the results of 23andMe where much better than chance:
For the seven diseases analyzed by the researchers, only about half of the risk factors provided by 23andme and Navigenics agreed for the five patients. For instance, for lupus and type 2 diabetes, three of the five subjects received conflicting results.
23andme market their product in a way that suggested that the numbers they provided were bunch more informative than they were in practice.
The FDA is tasked with stopped people from selling snake oil and if you get random results on your risk type based on whether you send your DNA to 23andme or it's competitor Navigenics, they are selling snake oil. How badly should 23aneMe be allowed in your opinion to misbehave?
A customer who knows what he's doing can still use the service and use free tools to analyse it's data. People who don't know what they are doing won't anymore be mislead by 23aneMe. To me that doesn't seem like bad regulatory action.
It's not clear that the results of 23andMe where much better than chance:
Not clear, to whom?
23andme market their product in a way that suggested that the numbers they provided were bunch more informative than they were in practice.
That's a claim about about the accuracy of the information that 23andme provides, and how that compares to the accuracy of their claims of accuracy. Where's your evidence for that claim?
The FDA is tasked with stopped people from selling snake oil ...
Not by me. If they disappeared into a black hole tomorrow, I would si...
This is prompted by Scott's excellent article, Meditations on Moloch.
I might caricature (grossly unfairly) his post like this: