Bioethical, Legal, and Anthropological Study of Technologies (BLAST) - PROJECT SUMMARY
Efforts to transform medicine from a reactionary, trial-and-error endeavor to an anticipatory, evidence-
based endeavor referred to as “precision medicine” have been underway for several years. Concurrently,
efforts also were undertaken to promote patient-centered “learning healthcare systems” (in which scientific
research informs the delivery of healthcare and healthcare influences research) and to modernize the
applicable ethical, legal, and regulatory frameworks in order to accelerate biomedical innovations. Novel
biomedical technologies (including AI-driven robotic surgical technologies, bionic technologies such as the
artificial pancreas systems for type 1 diabetes, and bioprinting of organs such as hearts) are advancing rapidly.
Yet there are a wide range of ethical, legal, and social implications (ELSI) that remain under-examined and call
into question whether existing laws, regulations, and ethical guidelines are adequate for ensuring that these
technologies are safe, effective, equitable, and privacy-preserving (while not unethically or unlawfully
obstructing patient access to their own health information or hampering the research, development, and
realization of the full potential of “mix and match” biomedical technologies tailored to each individual's needs
and preferences).
In this exploratory project, we seek to examine the data practices, data privacy, data access, and data
justice issues (Aim 1); examine regulatory pathways and identify regulatory gaps (Aim 2); and examine liability
risks (Aim 3) related to the development and use of three technologies in healthcare: robotics, bionics, and
bioprinting. To do so, we will rely upon an innovative combination of bioethical, legal, and anthropological
approaches involving key informant interviews with scientists/engineers and lawyers, internet research of
technology developers' website disclosures, normative bioethics and comparative legal research (comparing
the US and EU regulatory frameworks), and legal research of emerging case law in four areas: products
liability, medical malpractice liability, organizational liability, and intellectual property infringement. This
approach could identify similarities and differences among the three technologies and also identify gaps in
perceived and actual liability risks.
The successful completion of this project would provide important insights that would not only lay a
solid empirical foundation for subsequent empirical and normative ethical, legal, and social implications (ELSI)
research regarding robotics, bionics, and bioprinting but also provide important insights to inform the
development, and refinement of educational materials, engineering standards, research and clinical practice
guidance, and institutional and public policies and procedures to help ensure the technologies' ethical and
responsible use in precision medicine.