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Experts want to ban the use of genetic testing in life insurance. Here’s why

Genetic testing is medical testing that looks at changes in genes, chromosomes or proteins. It first appeared in medicine in the 1950s. Since then genetic testing as an industry has expanded exponentially. Today, there are almost 70,000 genetic tests in use.

A genetic test can confirm or rule out a suspected genetic condition or your likelihood of developing or passing on a genetic condition. The most common type is newborn screening and prenatal screening, but genetic tests can also be used by people with a family history of certain conditions, or to identify or rule out a specific diagnosis. 

Genomic testing does a similar thing, looking at a wider test of your DNA to identify any variants. Genetic testing looks at a couple of genes at a time, while genomic testing reviews a bigger picture. 

How could genetic testing potentially impact your life insurance?

Genetic testing’s ability to identify a person’s risk of developing a health condition or their likelihood of inheriting a disease that would require specific treatment means people are concerned this information could be used by life insurers in a number of ways.

While there’s no guarantee a life insurer will do any of these things, it’s the potential that has people concerned. The AMA is worried people’s concerns about accessing cover will stop people undergoing important tests that may be vital to their health. 

Why does the AMA want a ban on genetic testing in life insurance? 

On 1 July  2019, the Financial Services Council (FSC) brought into effect a moratorium on the use of genetic testing in life insurance. This ruling banned life insurers from using genetic testing on policies under $500,000, but the average policy is now over $700,000. It also banned insurers from requiring or encouraging genetic testing. 

The FSC says reporting following the moratorium showed 77 per cent of cases weren’t impacted at all by the results of genetic testing, and only 9 per cent  were adversely impacted. 

However, Monash University, which studied the moratorium, found a very different outcome. Its reporting showed applicants with genetic tests that indicated a predisposition to a condition experienced difficulties accessing life insurance and that Australians were foregoing genetic testing just in case it impacted their ability to get life insurance.

AMA president Professor Steven Robson said genetic and genomic testing was too important for people to be skipping it out of fear it could impact their life insurance.

“Genetic testing and genomic research have the capacity to rapidly transform healthcare in Australia by potentially providing more cost-effective treatment options and improving patient outcomes by identifying a need for treatment before an issue arises,” Prof. Robson said.

“The industry has placed its own partial moratorium on the requirement to disclose genetic test results, but we need a legislated ban to give consumers absolute certainty that their genetic status won’t be used by insurers to freeze them out of certain levels of cover.”

Who else supports the ban?

The Council of Australian Life Insurers (CALI), which represents 19 members, supports the ban on genetic testing in insurance underwriting, echoing the AMA’s concerns over the reduction in testing if a ban is not supported.

CALI CEO Christine Cupitt said the industry doesn’t want to use sneaky tactics to deny people cover. 

“It has never been the intention of the life insurance industry to deter people from taking genetic tests that give them more information about their overall health,” Ms Cupitt said.

“Australia’s life insurers have never, and would never, require someone to take a genetic test for the purposes of underwriting.”

The bottom line?

No matter what the Treasury’s policy decisions are, it’s important to remember that you have rights and there are limits to what an insurer can request from you. Make sure you’ve done your homework before you speak to an insurer and always be aware of your rights as a consumer.

Also read: Health tests are booming online but can you trust them?

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