Individual, personalized genetic information is increasingly available, leading to the possibility of greater adverse selection over time, particularly in individual-payer insurance markets; this selection could impact the viability of these markets. We use data on individuals at risk for Huntington disease (HD), a degenerative neurological disorder with significant effects on morbidity, to estimate adverse selection in long-term care insurance. We find strong evidence of adverse selection: individuals who carry the HD genetic mutation are up to 5 times as likely as the general population to own long-term care insurance. We use these estimates to make predictions about the future of this market as genetic information increases. We argue tha...
The Human Genetics Commission intends to study the use of family history in underwriting, regarding ...
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and publish...
Consumer groups fear that the use of genetic testing information in insurance underwriting might lea...
Individual, personalized genetic information is increasingly available, leading to the possibility o...
Individual, personalized genetic information is increasingly available, leading to the possibility o...
We describe briefly a model of Huntington’s disease (HD), a highly penetrant, dominantly inherited, ...
Rapid advances in genetic epidemiology and the setting up of large-scale cohort studies have shifted...
We apply a model of Alzheimer’s Disease developed by Macdonald & Pritchard (1999) to the questio...
Consumer groups fear that the use of genetic testing information in insurance underwriting might lea...
The focus of genetics is shifting its contribution to common, complex disorders. New genetic risk fa...
Insurance underwriting aims to identify risk factors that stratify customers into homogeneous groups...
We use novel data to study genetic testing among individuals at risk for Huntington disease (HD), a ...
The dissertation can be viewed at as a contribution to the discussion about using genetic informatio...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN051862 / BLDSC - British Library D...
Huntington disease (HD), the “Dancing Mania” of the Middle Ages, has always been a particular target...
The Human Genetics Commission intends to study the use of family history in underwriting, regarding ...
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and publish...
Consumer groups fear that the use of genetic testing information in insurance underwriting might lea...
Individual, personalized genetic information is increasingly available, leading to the possibility o...
Individual, personalized genetic information is increasingly available, leading to the possibility o...
We describe briefly a model of Huntington’s disease (HD), a highly penetrant, dominantly inherited, ...
Rapid advances in genetic epidemiology and the setting up of large-scale cohort studies have shifted...
We apply a model of Alzheimer’s Disease developed by Macdonald & Pritchard (1999) to the questio...
Consumer groups fear that the use of genetic testing information in insurance underwriting might lea...
The focus of genetics is shifting its contribution to common, complex disorders. New genetic risk fa...
Insurance underwriting aims to identify risk factors that stratify customers into homogeneous groups...
We use novel data to study genetic testing among individuals at risk for Huntington disease (HD), a ...
The dissertation can be viewed at as a contribution to the discussion about using genetic informatio...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN051862 / BLDSC - British Library D...
Huntington disease (HD), the “Dancing Mania” of the Middle Ages, has always been a particular target...
The Human Genetics Commission intends to study the use of family history in underwriting, regarding ...
This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and publish...
Consumer groups fear that the use of genetic testing information in insurance underwriting might lea...