Australian Genomics: Outcomes of a 5-year national program to accelerate the integration of genomics in healthcare

Stark, Zornitza and Boughtwood, Tiffany and Haas, Matilda and Braithwaite, Jeffrey and Gaff, Clara L. and Goranitis, Ilias and Spurdle, Amanda B. and Hansen, David P. and Hofmann, Oliver and Laing, Nigel and Metcalfe, Sylvia and Newson, Ainsley J. and Scott, Hamish S. and Thorne, Natalie and Ward, Robyn L. and Dinger, Marcel E. and Best, Stephanie and Long, Janet C. and Grimmond, Sean M. and Pearson, John and Waddell, Nicola and Barnett, Christopher P. and Cook, Matthew and Field, Michael and Fielding, David and Fox, Stephen B. and Gecz, Jozef and Jaffe, Adam and Leventer, Richard J. and Lockhart, Paul J. and Lunke, Sebastian and Mallett, Andrew J. and McGaughran, Julie and Mileshkin, Linda and Nones, Katia and Roscioli, Tony and Scheffer, Ingrid E. and Semsarian, Christopher and Simons, Cas and Thomas, David M. and Thorburn, David R. and Tothill, Richard and White, Deborah and Dunwoodie, Sally and Simpson, Peter T. and Phillips, Peta and Brion, Marie-Jo and Finlay, Keri and Quinn, Michael CJ. and Mattiske, Tessa and Tudini, Emma and Boggs, Kirsten and Murray, Sean and Wells, Kathy and Cannings, John and Sinclair, Andrew H. and Christodoulou, John and North, Kathryn N. (2023) Australian Genomics: Outcomes of a 5-year national program to accelerate the integration of genomics in healthcare. The American Journal of Human Genetics, 110 (3). pp.419-426. ISSN 00029297

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Link to published document: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2023.01.018

Abstract

Australian Genomics is a national collaborative partnership of more than 100 organizations piloting a whole-of-system approach to integrating genomics into healthcare, based on federation principles. In the first five years of operation, Australian Genomics has evaluated the outcomes of genomic testing in more than 5,200 individuals across 19 rare disease and cancer flagship studies. Comprehensive analyses of the health economic, policy, ethical, legal, implementation and workforce implications of incorporating genomics in the Australian context have informed evidence-based change in policy and practice, resulting in national government funding and equity of access for a range of genomic tests. Simultaneously, Australian Genomics has built national skills, infrastructure, policy, and data resources to enable effective data sharing to drive discovery research and support improvements in clinical genomic delivery.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
Depositing User: Repository Administrator
Date Deposited: 28 Apr 2023 02:59
Last Modified: 28 Apr 2023 02:59
URI: https://eprints.victorchang.edu.au/id/eprint/1395

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