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Identity, Invention, and the Culture of Personalized Medicine Patenting

This book provides an overview of developments in personalized medicine patenting and explores its normative implications to suggest policies to best regulate it.

Shubha Ghosh (Author)

9781107655775, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 6 March 2014

232 pages, 11 b/w illus. 6 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.2 cm, 0.32 kg

'Ghosh demonstrates how something as abstract as a patent can affect the way we see others and ourselves. From this perspective, he provides valuable insights and analytical tools that allow for a more robust discussion of the impact of patents on society and individuals.' Jurimetrics

What are the normative implications of patenting in the area of personalized medicine? As patents on genes and medical diagnoses have increased over the past decade, this question lies at the intersection of intellectual property theory, identity politics, biomedical ethics and constitutional law. These patents are part of the personalized medicine industry, which develops medical treatments tailored to individuals based on race and other characteristics. This book provides an overview of developments in personalized medicine patenting and suggests policies to best regulate such patents.

1. Persons and patents
2. Start-ups, up-starts, and markets for personalized medicine
3. The case of race-specific patents
4. Normative construction of identity
5. Persons, patents, and policy
6. A business, a litigant, a metaphor: the future of personalized medicine patents.

Subject Areas: Medical & healthcare law [LNTM], Intellectual property law [LNR], Law [L]

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