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92 Stories on Genetics
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House sends anti-genetic discrimination bill to Bush

Companies would no longer be able to use genetic information like a person's predisposition for breast cancer, sickle cell or diabetes to make insurance or job decisions under a bill passed by Congress on Thursday.

Senate passes genetic discrimination legislation

People learning through genetic testing that they might be susceptible to devastating diseases wouldn't also have to worry about losing their jobs or their health insurance under anti-discrimination legislation the Senate passed Thursday.

Autistic children linked to same sperm donor

He's only 5½ years old, and yet he's practically memorized the entire New York subway grid.

Time.com: Lung Cancer Genes Identified

Why do some smokers get cancer and others don't? Scientists have discovered two genetic variants that may be the reason

Time.com: Genes and Post-Traumatic Stress

A groundbreaking new study helps explain why some people succumb to post-traumatic stress disorder while others don't

SI.com: Steroids In America: The Future

I am one of the most avid sports fans you'll find," Se-Jin Lee says. It's true. He'll watch anything. Basketball. Football. Fútbol. Billiards on channel seven-hundred-whatever. As a graduate student in the '80s Lee used to sit in his car in the driveway with the radio on to listen to the games of faraway baseball teams. Even now, in his lab at Johns Hopkins Medical School in Baltimore, he easily rattles off the NCAA basketball tournament winners in order from 1964 to 2007. And, like anyone who values fair competition these days, he's disturbed by the issue of performance-enhancing drugs in sports.

Are your politics rooted in your genes?

For years, political scientists assumed our political leanings came from the way we were raised and the company we keep. You're a screaming liberal? Must be because you were raised in a household full of screaming liberals. You're an arch conservative? Must be because of that college you went to.

Time.com: Scientist Creates Life -- Almost

Craig Venter has built the first man-made genome. Soon those genes may cause a cell to come alive. This tiny organism will be Venter's own -- and that's just the start

Time.com: Genes Increase Prostate Cancer Risk

Common genetic variants raise a man's risk of prostate cancer -- especially in combination with family history

Time.com: Rare Gene Change Linked to Autism

A rare genetic variation dramatically raises the risk of developing autism, a large study showed, opening new research targets for better understanding the disorder and for treating it

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