The future of medical genetics
Nearly three decades ago, I created a course for first year medical students called “Molecular Biology and Genetics.” Together with a clinical faculty, I co-directed the course for 22 years. There’s a piece over at Medpage about “niche careers” in medicine. Here’s one: “ 7. Medical Genetics and Genomics Medical geneticists diagnose and manage hereditary conditions, using genomic data to guide treatment and counsel patients on inherited disease risk. As whole-genome sequencing becomes cheaper and more accessible, the specialty is moving from rare disease management to mainstream medicine. Within a generation, a medical geneticist's input may be standard in the workup of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and beyond.” Before I retired, I had a couple of discussions with physicians about whether medical genetics as a distinct field will cease to exist because genomics will make pedigrees and statistical genetics obsolete. I thought it would and I feel vindicated by current events. “Gen...