google-site-verification: googlec7193c3de77668c9.html

Inside Health – Should all babies have their genome sequenced at birth?

Advertisements

Available for over a year

This week we’re looking at government plans to start sequencing the DNA of every newborn baby in England within the next decade.

Each newborn would undergo whole genome sequencing to assess their risk of hundreds of diseases, under NHS plans.

It promises a revolution in spotting disease early – but are there also risks?

And use of nicotine pouches is rising, especially among young men.

But these little sachets that fit under the top lip aren’t yet regulated – so what do we know about the potential harms?

Finally, as the cold weather continues, James gets a lesson in walking like a penguin to see if it helps avoid trips, slips and falls…

Presenter: James Gallagher
Producers: Tom Bonnett, Alice-Lipscombe-Southwell and Thomas Hunt
Production coordinator: Stuart Laws
Content editor: Ilan Goodman

Programme Website


BBC News

Views: 2

See also  Conversion practice linked to greater risk of mental health symptoms, US surveys of LGBTQ+ people suggest

Check Also

Maternal weight may influence microbiota signaling in amniotic fluid

[ TEM figures for each sample type. a: Amniotic fluid, lean. b: Amniotic fluid, overweight. …

Clues to psilocybin's epigenetic effects on people with alcohol use disorder

[ Some psychedelics, psychoactive substances that alter people’s mood, perceptions and mental processes, were recently …

First new US sunscreen ingredient since 1999 approved by FDA. A skin scientist explains how bemotrizinol works

[ Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain As summer in the U.S. heats up, people become more …

Leave a Reply

Available for Amazon Prime
You have been rate limited for making too many requests in a short time frame. Just a moment....