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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Genomic science can predict disease\, guide treatment\, and res
 hape medicine. It also raises questions we are still learning how to answe
 r:Who can see your genetic data?Who decides how it gets used?What happens 
 when the promises of genomic medicine arrive late\, or not at all?These ar
 e the questions behind BHH 6396: Ethical\, Legal\, and Social Implications
  of Genomics. Join the Department of Bioethics &amp\; Health Humanities fo
 r a free one-hour mini seminar previewing this Fall 2026 graduate course\,
  which follows genomics from the early days of the Human Genome Project to
  the debates shaping medicine\, research\, policy\, and public life today.
 No science or humanities background is required. Bring your curiosity and 
 an hour of your time.Event detailsWednesday\, July 29\, 2026\, 12:00&ndash
 \;1:00 PMSHP/SON 1.104 (Quad Room 79)Free and open to all UTMB students\, 
 faculty\, and staffRSVP at utmb.us/g60About the course\n BHH 6396: Ethical
 \, Legal\, and Social Implications of Genomics &middot\; Fall 2026 &middot
 \; Wednesdays\, 1&ndash\;4 p.m. &middot\; Aug. 31&ndash\;Dec. 18\, 2026. R
 egistration opens August 1. The Department of Bioethics &amp\; Health Huma
 nities at UTMB studies the big questions that run through medicine and sci
 ence: how knowledge gets made\, who it serves\, and what we owe one anothe
 r in health care.
DTEND:20260729T180000Z
DTSTAMP:20260706T203722Z
DTSTART:20260729T170000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Your genome is data. Who gets to use it?
UID:RFCALITEM639189490422282514
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Genomic science can predict disease\, guide
  treatment\, and reshape medicine. It also raises questions we are still l
 earning how to answer:</p><ul><li>Who can see your genetic data?</li><li>W
 ho decides how it gets used?</li><li>What happens when the promises of gen
 omic medicine arrive late\, or not at all?</li></ul><p>These are the quest
 ions behind <strong>BHH 6396: Ethical\, Legal\, and Social Implications of
  Genomics</strong>. Join the Department of Bioethics &amp\; Health Humanit
 ies for a free one-hour mini seminar previewing this Fall 2026 graduate co
 urse\, which follows genomics from the early days of the Human Genome Proj
 ect to the debates shaping medicine\, research\, policy\, and public life 
 today.</p><p>No science or humanities background is required. Bring your c
 uriosity and an hour of your time.</p><p><strong>Event details</strong></p
 ><ul><li>Wednesday\, July 29\, 2026\, 12:00&ndash\;1:00 PM</li><li>SHP/SON
  1.104 (Quad Room 79)</li><li>Free and open to all UTMB students\, faculty
 \, and staff</li><li>RSVP at <a href="http://utmb.us/g60"><strong>utmb.us/
 g60</strong></a></li></ul><p><strong>About the course</strong>\n BHH 6396:
  Ethical\, Legal\, and Social Implications of Genomics &middot\; Fall 2026
  &middot\; Wednesdays\, 1&ndash\;4 p.m. &middot\; Aug. 31&ndash\;Dec. 18\,
  2026. Registration opens August 1. </p><p>The Department of Bioethics &am
 p\; Health Humanities at UTMB studies the big questions that run through m
 edicine and science: how knowledge gets made\, who it serves\, and what we
  owe one another in health care.</p>
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