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  1.  24
    Drugs, genes and screens: The ethics of preventing and treating spinal muscular atrophy.Christopher Gyngell, Zornitza Stark & Julian Savulescu - 2020 - Bioethics 34 (5):493-501.
    Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is the most common genetic disease that causes infant mortality. Its treatment and prevention represent the paradigmatic example of the ethical dilemmas of 21st‐century medicine. New therapies (nusinersen and AVXS‐101) hold the promise of being able to treat, but not cure, the condition. Alternatively, genomic analysis could identify carriers, and carriers could be offered in vitro fertilization and preimplantation genetic diagnosis. In the future, gene editing could prevent the condition at the embryonic stage. How should these (...)
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  2. More Than a Decade of Rapid Genomic Sequencing: Where Are We Now?Carol J. Saunders, Luca Brunelli, Michael J. Deem, Emily G. Farrow, Madhuri Hegde & Zornitza Stark - forthcoming - Clinical Chemistry.
  3.  8
    Predictive genetic testing for neurodegenerative conditions: how should conflicting interests within families be managed?Zornitza Stark, Jane Wallace, Lynn Gillam, Matthew Burgess & Martin B. Delatycki - 2016 - Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (10):640-642.
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    Consent for rapid genomic sequencing for critically ill children: legal and ethical issues.Danya Vears, Zornitza Stark, Fiona Lynch & Christopher Gyngell - 2021 - Monash Bioethics Review 39 (Suppl 1):117-129.
    Although rapid genomic sequencing (RGS) is improving care for critically ill children with rare disease, it also raises important ethical questions that need to be explored as its use becomes more widespread. Two such questions relate to the degree of consent that should be required for RGS to proceed and whether it might ever be appropriate to override parents’ decisions not to allow RGS to be performed in their critically ill child. To explore these questions, we first examine the legal (...)
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