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Hanna Krushelnytska
Private-law denition of the concept and legal nature of human genetic information
The International Declaration on Human Genetic Data (UNESCO, 
2003) uses the term “human genetic data” to mean information about the 
heritable characteristics of individuals obtained by analysis of nucleic acids 
or by other scientic analysis. From this denition, we can conclude that 
genetic data is one of the types of genetic information. 
In the legal literature, there is a position that the concept of information 
includes both information, which is viewed as information related to a 
specic subject, object, fact, case, the rights to which belong to the subject 
of information, and data – a set of information, combined and ordered 
according to a certain attribute, several attributes or criteria, the rights to 
which, as a general rule, belong to the author of this information. 
From this point of view, information about the heritable characteristics 
of specic individuals is more genetic information than genetic data. Such 
genetic information is of an individual, personal nature as relating directly 
or indirectly  to a  specic  or  specic  person.  In  turn,  genetic  data have  a 
sign of mass character, are non-personalised data (pseudonymised) and 
primarily pursue research goals, for example, to develop measures to 
increase life expectancy, develop technologies for screening the human 
gene  pool,  assess  genetic  risks,  create  medicinal  products,  and  genome 
sequencing. 
According to para. 1 of Article 16 of the Additional Protocol to the 
Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine concerning genetic testing 
for medical purposes (CETS No. 203), research on a person may only be 
undertaken if the persons undergoing research have been informed of their 
rights and the safeguards prescribed by law for their protection. It follows 
from the above that this Convention considers genetic information in the 
context of the personal data of an individual. 
Also, in accordance with Regulation (EU) 2016/679 of the European 
Parliament and of the Council of 27 April 2016 on the protection of natural 
persons with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free 
movement of such data, and repealing Directive 95/46/EC (General Data 
Protection Regulation) “genetic data” is dened as personal data relating to 
the inherited or acquired genetic characteristics of a natural person which 
result from the analysis of a biological sample from the natural person 
in question, in particular chromosomal, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) or 
ribonucleic acid (RNA) analysis, or from the analysis of another element 
enabling equivalent information to be obtained (European Union, 2016). 
At the same time, according to paragraph 26 of the Regulation, the 
principles of personal data protection do not apply to any information 
concerning an identied or identiable natural person, as a result of which 
the processing of genetic information for statistical or research purposes 
is excluded from the scope of data protection, which once again conrms