Okay, but wait. All this really translates into is "getting" the disease 2-6 years earlier than you actually get it. From an insurance standpoint, if you are insured (through your employer or otherwise) when you get the test, it would be covered as a new disease. The only way you would become uninsurable is if you lost your insurance after being tested/diagnosed, and were also unable to get on another group policy through a new employer. Which is not a great situation, to be sure, but it's what already happens now to millions of people with pre-existing conditions.* This blood test is not the same as being able to tell from birth all the diseases and conditions you will eventually get.
*And for the record, many states do already have government insurance programs for people who are uninsurable because of pre-existing conditions. In Texas they call it the "High Risk Pool," and my friend's 5-year-old diabetic daughter is on it.
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