Oregon Code § 192.533·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Legislative findings; purposes.
(1) The Legislative Assembly finds that:
(a) The DNA
molecule contains information about the probable medical future of an
individual and the individuals blood relatives. This information is written in
a code that is rapidly being broken.
(b) Genetic
information is uniquely private and personal information that generally should
not be collected, retained or disclosed without the individuals authorization.
(c) The improper
collection, retention or disclosure of genetic information can lead to
significant harm to an individual and the individuals blood relatives,
including stigmatization and discrimination in areas such as employment,
education, health care and insurance.
(d) An analysis
of an individuals DNA provides information not only about the individual, but
also about blood relatives of the individual, with the potential for impacting
family privacy, including reproductive decisions.
(e) Current legal
protections for medical information, tissue samples and DNA samples are
inadequate to protect genetic privacy.
(f) Laws for the
collection, storage and use of identifiable DNA samples and private genetic
information obtained from those samples are needed both to protect individual
and family privacy and to permit and encourage legitimate scientific and
medical research.
(2) The purposes
of the genetic privacy statutes are as follows:
(a) To define the
rights of individuals whose genetic information is collected, retained or
disclosed and the rights of the individuals blood relatives.
(b) To define the
circumstances under which an individual may be subjected to genetic testing.
(c) To define the
circumstances under which an individuals genetic information may be collected,
retained or disclosed.
(d) To protect
against discrimination by an insurer or employer based upon an individuals
genetic characteristics.
(e) To define the
circumstances under which a DNA sample or genetic information may be used for
research. [Formerly 659.705; 2003 c.333 §2]
Note:
See note under 192.531.