The Need for Education - Cynthia Fitch
Dr. Cynthia Fitch, professor of genetics and molecular
biology at Seattle Pacific University, spoke from her experiences of teaching
General Biology to non-Biology majors.[W]e learn that if the gene is mutated,
and someone inherits two copies of the mutated gene, disease is the result. I
know that the severity of the disease is often variable and the environment can
serve to modify the genetic expression of a particular mutation. But these
nuances are difficult to explain to a class of over 150 college students not
interested in majoring in anything remotely resembling biology. They are simply
trying to understand big A, little a and what on earth an allele has to do
with them.
Why do we insist that all students take a course in
biology? Fitch asks. Quoting Dr. Cole-Turner on Rothman, Fitch says, every
possible issue of our time - race and racism, addictions, cancer, sexuality has
all been placed in the genetics frame. Therefore, Fitch says, educating our
students and our colleagues about this powerful tool called genetics is
essential to our understanding of our world today.
Referencing the opening story in Cole-Turners book Pastoral
Genetics, Fitch tells of a pastor faced with counseling a couple whose
fetus exhibited the gene for Cystic Fibrosis. The couple terminated the
pregnancy and, after much counseling and prayer, chose to bear another
child - who was born healthy. The pastor struggled to help, to listen, to cope,
and to advise on principles that might run contrary to her own, Fitch says.
The pastor wished she could remember what she had learned in high school
genetics and she hoped she would never again face a similar situation. My
goal, Fitch says, is for my students to remember their genetics instruction
as being significant and important and how to find resources when they have
questions.
My fellow geneticists, biochemists, and biologists should
also be helping to educate our communities about genetics, technology and the
power of the information it provides, Fitch says. Scientists, she says, must
be accountable for the information we are uncovering. We cannot simply deliver
it without compassion and feeling. Yet, as scientists, we are called to
objectivity and [are] obliged to present all the genetic knowledge that is
before us. We cannot try to simply make a genetic disease go away because it
feels bad.
Where scientists have failed, however, Fitch says, is in
learning to rely on the community ... the Pastors and counselors to help
disseminate the information in a way that is healing or sensitive.
We have long had a relationship between clergy and
physician, Fitch says, one to heal the soul, the other the body. Now we add
scientists and their genetic predictions to this complex relationship.
Pastors, your understanding of this genetic information is
crucial, Fitch says. You, too, may be called upon to counsel in a situation
similar to that of the pastor in Cole-Turners book, for [m]embers of your
congregation face some form of genetic testing or recombinant DNA-based
medicines every time they go to a large hospital.
Scientists and Pastors probably seem odd collaborators,
says Fitch, but our mutual mission of providing vital information related to
the value of a life can bring us together. Pastors and scientists must
collaborate, dialoguing both formally and informally about the genetic future
and the information it holds. And Fitch concludes, Let us help young parents
possess this genetic information so that when faced with a life and death
decision, it will be with all the facts of the day. Thus, the decisions made
by individuals facing genetic disease will reflect integration of solid genetic
information and sound moral reasoning after consultation with pastors who
understand genetics and geneticists who understand the value of life.
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| Contributed by: Heather Evans
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