AbràmoffM. D., LavinP. T., BirchM., ShahN., & FolkJ. C. (2018). Pivotal trial of an autonomous AI-based diagnostic system for detection of diabetic retinopathy in primary care offices. Nature Partner Journals, 1(39). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-018-0040-6
2.
AlexanderH., MedewJ., & HarrisonD. (2015, 24January. What’s really going on with health costs?The Age, pp. 26–27.
3.
AllenG. (1996). Science misapplied: The eugenic age revisited. Technology Review, 99(6), 23–31.
4.
ArmstrongD. (1995). The rise of surveillance medicine,Sociology of Health and Illness, 17(3), 393–404.
5.
ArmstrongN., & EborallH. (2012). The sociology of medical screening: Critical perspectives, new directions [Special issue]. Sociology of Health and Illness, 34(2), 161–176.
6.
AronowitzR. (2015). Risky medicine: Our quest to cure fear and uncertainty. The University of Chicago Press.
7.
BancroftJ. (2002). The medicalization of female sexual dysfunction: The need for caution. Archives of Sexual Behaviour, 35(4), 451–455.
8.
BandaJ. (2015). Rapid home HIV testing: Risk and the moral imperatives of biological citizenship. Body & Society, 21(4), 24–47.
9.
BayramC., BrittH., MillerG., & ValentiL. (2009). Evidence-practice gap in GP pathology test ordering: A comparison of BEACH pathology data and recommended testing. https://www1.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/Content/9C300FE48F876E95CA257BF0001ACE0E/$File/Evidence-practice%20gap%20in%20GP%20pathology%20test%20ordering.pdf
10.
BrittH., MillerG. C., HendersonJ., BayramC., HarrisonC., ValentiL., WongC., GordonJ., PollackA. J., PanY., & CharlesJ. (2015). General practice activity in Australia 2014–15. Sydney University Press. https://ses.library.usyd.edu.au//bitstream/2123/13765/4/9781743324530_ONLINE.pdf
11.
CarpenterC. R., RajaA. S., & BrownM. D. (2015) Overtesting and the downstream consequences of overtreatment: Implications of ‘preventing overdiagnosis’ for emergency medicine. Academic Emergency Medicine, 22(12), 1484–1492.
12.
CasselC. K., & GuestJ. A. (2012) Choosing wisely: Helping physicians and patients make smart decisions about their care. JAMA, 307(17), 1801–1802.
13.
ChappleA., ZieblandS., & McPhersonA. (2004). Stigma, shame and blame experienced by patients with lung cancer: A qualitative study. British Medical Journal, 328(7454), 1470.
14.
Choosing Wisely (n. d.). https://www.choosingwisely.org/
15.
ConfessoreN. (2018, 4April. Cambridge Analytica and Facebook: The scandal and the fallout so far. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/04/us/politics/cambridge-analytica-scandal-fallout.html
16.
CookH., & DowA. (2020, 19August. How COVID-19 stigma is turning Victorians away from testing. The Age. https://www.theage.com.au/politics/victoria/how-covid-19-stigma-is-turning-victorians-away-from-testing-20200819-p55n84.html
17.
CrawfordR. (1994). The boundaries of the self and the unhealthy other: Reflections on health, culture and AIDS. Social Science and Medicine, 38(10), 1347–1365.
18.
Dementia Australia (2019). Cognitive screening and assessment. https://www.dementia.org.au/information/for-health-professionals/clinical-resources/cognitive-screening-and-assessment
19.
DusterT. (1990). Backdoor to eugenics. Routledge.
20.
EddyN. (2019, 11June. AI-powered mobile apps can listen to coughs, make diagnoses. Healthcare IT News. https://www.healthcareit.com.au/article/ai-powered-mobile-app-can-listen-coughs-make-diagnoses
21.
FlamF. (2019, 24May. Don’t get sucked in by the fat gene. The Australian Financial Review, 5R.
22.
FoongP. (2019, 10June. Designing your own child: Australia’s regulations. BioNews. https://www.bionews.org.uk/page_143276
FraserS., & TreloarC. (2006). ‘Spoiled identity’ in hepatitis C infection: The binary logic of despair. Critical Public Health, 16(2), 99–110.
25.
GierynT. F. (1999). Cultural boundaries of science: Credibility on the line. Chicago University Press.
26.
GlassJ. M. (1997). Life unworthy of life: Racial phobia and mass murder in Hitler’s Germany. Basic Books.
27.
GrenierA., LloydL., & PhillipsonC. (2017). Precarity in late life: Rethinking dementia as a ‘frailed’ old age. Sociology of Health and Illness, 39(2), 318–330.
28.
GuglielmiG. (2019, 18April. New genetic ‘risk score’ could predict obesity odds. Science. https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/04/new-genetic-risk-score-could-predict-obesity-odds
29.
HallowellN. (1999). Doing the right thing: Genetic risk and responsibility. Sociology of Health and Illness, 21(5), 597–621.
30.
HerperM. (2013, December5). 23andMe stops offering genetic tests related to health. Forbes. https://www.forbes.com/sites/matthewherper/2013/12/05/23andme-stops-offering-genetic-tests-related-to-health/#5b58753b4ef7
31.
HerreraM., & LindgrenC. M. (2010). The genetics of obesity. Current Diabetes Reports, 10(6), 498–505.
32.
IFRC, UNICEF, & WHO (2020). Social stigma associated with COVID-19. https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/covid19-stigma-guide.pdf
33.
JoyceK. (2008) Magnetic appeal: MRI and the myth of transparency. Cornell University Press.
34.
JutelA. G. (2011). Putting a name to it: Diagnosis in contemporary society. John Hopkins.
35.
JutelA. G. (2019). Diagnosis: Truths and tales. University of Toronto Press.
36.
KheraA. V., ChaffinM., WadeK. H., ZahidS., BrancaleJ., XiaR., DistefanoM., Senol-CosarO., HaasM. E., BickA., AragamK. G., LanderE. S., SmithG. D., Mason-SuaresH., FornageM., LeboM., TimpsonN. J., KaplanL. M., & KathiresanS. (2019). Polygenic prediction of weight and obesity trajectories from birth to adulthood. Cell, 177(3), 587–596.
37.
KwanB. (2018, 16July. Stay or go? My health record opt-out met with fierce debate. SBS News. https://www.sbs.com.au/news/stay-or-go-my-health-record-opt-out-met-with-fierce-debate
38.
LoeM. (2004). The rise of Viagra: How the little blue pill changed sex in America. New York University Press.
39.
McGregorM. J., & MartinD. (2012). Testing 1, 2, 3: Is overtesting undermining patient and system health?Canadian Family Physician, 58(11), 1191–1193.
40.
MolA. (2000). What diagnostic devices do: The case of blood sugar measurement. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics, 21(1), 9–22.
41.
MolA. (2002) The body multiple: Ontology in medical practice. Duke University Press.
42.
MorganS., & ColemanJ. (2014). We live in testing times. Australian Family Physician, 43(5), 273–276.
43.
MoynihanR. (2003). The making of a disease: Female sexual dysfunction. British Medical Journal, 326(7390), 45–47.
44.
MoynihanR. (2005). The marketing of a disease: Female sexual dysfunction. British Medical Journal, 330(7484), 192–194.
45.
MoynihanR., & CasselsA. (2005). Selling sickness: How drug companies are turning us into patients. Allen & Unwin.
46.
MoynihanR., DoustJ., & HenryD. (2012). Preventing overdiagnosis: How to stop harming the healthy. British Medical Journal, 344, e3502. https://doi.org/doi:10.1136/bmj.e3502
47.
MoynihanR., HeathI., & HenryD. (2002). Selling sickness: The pharmaceutical industry and disease mongering. British Medical Journal, 324(7342), 886–891.
NobleS. U. (2018). Algorithms of oppression: How search engines reinforce racism. New York University Press.
50.
O’NeillC. (2016). Weapons of math destruction: How big data increases inequality and threatens democracy. Allen Lane.
51.
OudshoornN., & PinchT. (Eds.). (2005). How users matter: The co-production of users and technology. MIT Press.
52.
PetersenA. (2007). Is the new genetics eugenic? Interpreting the past, envisioning the future [Special issue on eugenics]. New Formations, 60(Winter2006–2007), 79–88.
53.
PetersenA. (2011). The politics of bioethics. Routledge.
54.
PetersenA. (2015). Hope in health: The socio-politics of optimism. Palgrave Macmillan.
55.
PetersenA. (2019) Digital health and technological promise. Routledge.
56.
PienaarK. (2016). Claiming rights, making citizens: HIV and the performativity of biological citizenship. Social Theory & Health, 14(2), 149–168.
57.
ShakespeareT., ZeiligH., & MittlerP. (2019). Rights in mind: Thinking differently about dementia and disability. Dementia, 18(3), 1075–1088.
58.
TalbotJ. (2019, 31March). This is what the Nazis wanted to do: Aussie couples are spending $20,000 to choose the eye colour and sex of their children—As the overseas clinic is slammed as promoting ‘eugenics’. Daily Mail. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6869463/This-Nazis-wanted-Aussie-couples-spending-20-000-designer-babies.html
TuttonR., & PrainsackB. (2011). Enterprising or altruistic selves? Making up research subjects in genetic research. Sociology of Health and Illness, 33(7), 1081–1095.
61.
ZuboffS. (2019). The age of surveillance capitalism: The fight for a human future at the new frontier of power. Profile Books.
62.
23andMe (2019). Find out what your DNA says about you and your family. https://www.23andme.com/en-int/