Biobanking, the large-scale, systematic collection of data and tissue for open-ended research purposes, is on the rise, particularly in clinical research. The infrastructures for the systematic procurement, management and eventual use of human tissue and data are positioned between healthcare and research. However, the positioning of biobanking infrastructures and transfer of tissue and data between research and care is not an innocuous go-between. Instead, it involves changes in both domains and raises issues about how distinctions between research and care are drawn and policed. Based on an analysis of the emergence and development of clinical biobanking in the Netherlands, this article explores how processes of bio-objectification associated with biobanking arise, redefining the ways in which distinctions between research and clinical care are governed.
CITATION STYLE
Boeckhout, M., & Douglas, C. M. W. (2015). Governing the research-care divide in clinical biobanking: Dutch perspectives. Life Sciences, Society and Policy, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40504-015-0025-z
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