Did you mean genetic database?
Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle: ...the skilled operator that she is, agreed that yes, if they were proved safe, this would be possible. Well, I might run a two-hour marathon if I were 30 years younger and had entirely different genetics, but that is not the world that we live in. I am asking for an acknowledgement of the realism of the situation as we conduct our debate going forward on this Bill. I start with a potential...
Lord Rooker: ...person and in Northern Ireland the figure may even be 2.7. So one can see that livestock is much more important to the economies of the island of Ireland than it is to the rest of the UK. Animal genetics are just as important on an all-island basis. For example, Elite Sires has been Ireland’s leading provider of high-quality pig semen for 30 years. It is the sole provider of DanBred...
Lord Bethell: ...recommendations in the review need to be considered carefully and we will respond in due course. I reassure the noble Baroness, Lady Barker, who asked that registries of devices as well as databases should be our expressed direction of travel: we have set this out in the government guidance published alongside the amendment. I would be happy to write to set this out clearly. Many have...
Jo Churchill: ...a drug or combinations of drugs is important. Only this morning I spoke to Mike Burrows of the wonderful Salford lung study, in which a drug is put into a real-world environment and connected with databases so that all of a patient’s health needs can be tracked. The study looks at real life and can cope with all the different variables to see the effects that a drug might have on people....
Lord Patel: ...in genomic medicine in the United Kingdom and the research centre which the Government support through the research councils. It is true that as we learn more and more about genomics and genetics, we will need to have a huge database from which we can learn. What the noble Lord, Lord Ryder, said is correct: there will be patients who would be appropriate for stratifications of medicines...
George Freeman: ...recently the news of Angelina Jolie’s decision to have a double mastectomy, having received a diagnosis of a high chance of developing breast cancer based on the most well-known and acknowledged genetic test, the BRCA mutation. The widespread coverage in the press of her decision has been helpful in raising public awareness, as have the powerful and moving descriptions of the thinking...
John Hayes: ...Accounting Fossils and the history of life From Enlightenment to Romanticism Fundamentals of interaction design Geology Graphs: network and design How the Universe works Human Biology Human genetics and health issues Innovation: Designing for a sustainable future Institutional development Intermediate French Intermediate German Intermediate Italian Intermediate Spanish International...
the Earl of Selborne: ...we are beginning to see that our ability to interpret the results is lagging behind the new generation of sequencing technologies, so it is essential that bioinformatics support and functional genetic investigations are available in close conjunction with the clinical services. I shall confine my remarks to Chapter 5 of the report, which relates to the need to support bioinformatics....
Lynne Jones: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department with reference to the answer of 10 July 2008, Official Report, columns 1767-8W, on genetics: databases, what proportion of DNA records of people (a) arrested but not charged for an offence, (b) arrested, charged but not convicted of an offence and (c) arrested, charged and convicted of an offence have resulted in matches with crime...
Christopher Huhne: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department with reference to the answer of 5 November 2008, Official Report, columns 601-02W, on genetics: databases, into what category of offence each record identified on the Police National Computer fell.
Jennifer Willott: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department (1) pursuant to the answer of 4 February 2009, Official Report, column 1236W, on genetics: databases, how many and what proportion of people with profiles on the national DNA database were recorded on the Police National Computer as having a conviction in each of the last 10 years; and if she will make a statement; (2) what her most...
Anne McIntosh: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how many times information has been accessed from the Police National Computer as evidence of bad character under section 101 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003.
Anne McIntosh: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department what estimate her Department has made of the number of cases where (a) fingerprints, (b) DNA and (c) a photograph have been entered on to the Police National Computer as a result of the issuing of penalty notices for disorder.
Christopher Huhne: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how old the (a) youngest and (b) oldest person with a profile on the national DNA database is; and how old the (i) youngest and (ii) oldest person to have had a profile added to the national DNA database was at the time the profile was added.
Jennifer Willott: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department with reference to the answer of 25 November 2008, Official Report, columns 1249-51W, on genetics: databases, how many and what proportion of recorded crimes have been detected using DNA from the national DNA database in each month since April 2008; and if she will make a statement.
Jennifer Willott: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department with reference to the answer of 23 January 2008, Official Report, column 2062W, on genetics: database, what research projects utilising data from the national DNA database have been approved since 15 January 2008; and if she will make a statement.
Sylvia Hermon: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department how many people resident in Northern Ireland have details registered on the National DNA Database.
Greg Knight: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department pursuant to the answer of 13 January 2009, Official Report, column 710W, on genetics: database, what steps she plans to take to comply with the S and Harper judgment in relation to retention of DNA information from people not convicted of a crime.
Jennifer Willott: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department with reference to the answer of 15 September 2008, Official Report, columns 2069-70W, on genetics: databases, what her most recent estimate is of the number of DNA samples taken and loaded onto the national DNA database since 31 March 2008 which would not previously have been taken prior to the entry into force of the Criminal Justice...
Jennifer Willott: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department (1) how many new profiles have been added to the national DNA database since December 2008, broken down by age group; how many have been added by each police force; and if she will make a statement; (2) with reference to the answer of 5 March 2008, Official Report, columns 2669-70W, on genetics: databases, how many and what...