Skip to Main Content

Author Details

Kelly E Ormond
Stanford University School of Medicine
1996
124
33
PMIDPaper TitleJournal TitlePublished Year
37296526International genetic counseling: What do genetic counselors actually do?J Genet Couns2024
37864743Healthcare and support experiences of adolescents and young adults diagnosed with 47,XXY, 47,XXX, and 48,XXYY.J Community Genet2024
37646199Exploring prenatal testing preferences among US pregnant individuals: A discrete choice experiment.J Genet Couns2024
36327324Patient experiences with clinical confirmatory genetic testing after using direct-to-consumer raw DNA and third-party genetic interpretation services.Transl Behav Med2023
37750464The right not to know: Non-disclosure of primary genetic test results and genetic counselors' response.J Genet Couns2023
37704345Ethical Aspects of Pediatric Genetic Care: Testing and Treatment.Pediatr Clin North Am2023
37339310Translational Justice in Human Gene Editing: Bringing End User Engagement and Policy Together.Am J Bioeth2023
37308598Defining critical educational components of informed consent for genetic testing: views of US-based genetic counselors and medical geneticists.Eur J Hum Genet2023
37074681How Interactive Visualizations Compare to Ethical Frameworks as Stand-Alone Ethics Learning Tools for Health Researchers and Professionals.AJOB Empir Bioeth2023
36919540Expanding Our Thoughts about Autonomy in Relation to Whether We Should Offer Genetic Testing for Nonmedical Traits.Am J Bioeth2023
36630325Expectations and attitudes towards medical artificial intelligence: A qualitative study in the field of stroke.PLoS One2023
34735685Treatment decision-making in sickle cell disease patients.J Community Genet2022
35476801Factors that impact on women's decision-making around prenatal genomic tests: An international discrete choice survey.Prenat Diagn2022
36542454Perspectives of Rare Disease Social Media Group Participants on Engaging With Genetic Counselors: Mixed Methods Study.J Med Internet Res2022
36028266Public preferences towards data management and governance in Swiss biobanks: results from a nationwide survey.BMJ Open2022
33855648"I wish that there was more info": characterizing the uncertainty experienced by carriers of pathogenic ATM and/or CHEK2 variants.Fam Cancer2022
34939177Correction to: Treatment decisionâ¿¿making in sickle cell disease patients.J Community Genet2022
35089945Assessing women's preferences towards tests that may reveal uncertain results from prenatal genomic testing: Development of attributes for a discrete choice experiment, using a mixed-methods design.PLoS One2022
32638447Parental experiences of uncertainty following an abnormal fetal anomaly scan: Insights using Han's taxonomy of uncertainty.J Genet Couns2021
33793624Public willingness to participate in personalized health research and biobanking: A large-scale Swiss survey.PLoS One2021
33926532Application of a framework to guide genetic testing communication across clinical indications.Genome Med2021
33724493Dealing with uncertain results from chromosomal microarray and exome sequencing in the prenatal setting: An international cross-sectional study with healthcare professionals.Prenat Diagn2021
34945775Defining the Critical Components of Informed Consent for Genetic Testing.J Pers Med2021
34732190Correction to: Physician-directed genetic screening to evaluate personal risk for medically actionable disorders: a large multi-center cohort study.BMC Med2021
34404389Physician-directed genetic screening to evaluate personal risk for medically actionable disorders: a large multi-center cohort study.BMC Med2021
34155632How to deal with uncertainty in prenatal genomics: A systematic review of guidelines and policies.Clin Genet2021
34124811U.S. Genetic counselors' perceptions of inpatient genetic counseling: A valuable model for medically complex patients.J Genet Couns2021
34096130"Doctors can read about it, they can know about it, but they've never lived with it": How parents use social media throughout the diagnostic odyssey.J Genet Couns2021
31570382Informed Consent in the Genomics Era.Cold Spring Harb Perspect Med2020
30688387Assessing genetic counselors' experiences with physician aid-in-dying and practice implications.J Genet Couns2019
31742431Perspectives of Sickle Cell Disease Stakeholders on Heritable Genome Editing.CRISPR J2019
29887604"I don't want to be Henrietta Lacks": diverse patient perspectives on donating biospecimens for precision medicine research.Genet Med2019
30168102Genetic Counselors' and Genetic Counseling Students' Implicit and Explicit Attitudes toward Homosexuality.J Genet Couns2019
29976988Developing a conceptual, reproducible, rubric-based approach to consent and result disclosure for genetic testing by clinicians with minimal genetics background.Genet Med2019
29949067Genetics and ethics.J Community Genet2019
31331245The clinical application of gene editing: ethical and social issues.Per Med2019
31599688Attitudes of Members of Genetics Professional Societies Toward Human Gene Editing.CRISPR J2019
31599684Attitudes Toward Hypothetical Uses of Gene-Editing Technologies in Parents of People with Autosomal Aneuploidies.CRISPR J2019
31190471Attitudes of people with inherited retinal conditions toward gene editing technology.Mol Genet Genomic Med2019
30951675The Responsibility to Recontact Research Participants after Reinterpretation of Genetic and Genomic Research Results.Am J Hum Genet2019
30741463Genetic counselors' perceptions of uncertainty in pretest counseling for genomic sequencing: A qualitative study.J Genet Couns2019
30835913Much ado about nothing: A qualitative study of the experiences of an average-risk population receiving results of exome sequencing.J Genet Couns2019
30706981Developing a genomics rotation: Practical training around variant interpretation for genetic counseling students.J Genet Couns2019
30914827What do we do now?: Responding to claims of germline gene editing in humans.Genet Med2019
30938092A genetic counseling needs assessment of Mexico.Mol Genet Genomic Med2019
30821877Challenges of infertility genetic counseling: Impact on counselors' personal and professional lives.J Genet Couns2019
30821867Secondary findings: How did we get here, and where are we going?J Genet Couns2019
30291341The Global State of the Genetic Counseling Profession.Eur J Hum Genet2019
29267267Metaphors matter: from biobank to a library of medical information.Genet Med2018
29502147Mindfulness Among Genetic Counselors Is Associated with Increased Empathy and Work Engagement and Decreased Burnout and Compassion Fatigue.J Genet Couns2018
  • 1 - 50 of 124

Recommended Authors

HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology
Career Start Year 2017
Number of shared co-authors 12
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Career Start Year 2015
Number of shared co-authors 11
National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health
Career Start Year 2013
Number of shared co-authors 22
Baylor College of Medicine.
Career Start Year 2013
Number of shared co-authors 7
University of Iowa.
Career Start Year 2012
Number of shared co-authors 12
HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology
Career Start Year 2012
Number of shared co-authors 17
Google
Career Start Year 2012
Number of shared co-authors 11
University of Exeter
Career Start Year 2009
Number of shared co-authors 1
Hospital for Sick Children, Canada University of Toronto
Career Start Year 2008
Number of shared co-authors 2
Biomedical Ethics Research Program, Mayo Clinic
Career Start Year 2008
Number of shared co-authors 6
Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University
Career Start Year 2007
Number of shared co-authors 22
Harvard Medical School, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute
Career Start Year 2007
Number of shared co-authors 23
Memorial University
Career Start Year 2006
Number of shared co-authors 5
Career Start Year 2005
Number of shared co-authors 1
Case Western Reserve University
Career Start Year 2005
Number of shared co-authors 17
University of Melbourne
Career Start Year 2004
Number of shared co-authors 9
Duke University School of Medicine
Career Start Year 1999
Number of shared co-authors 4
Biomedical Ethics, Mayo Clinic and Foundation
Career Start Year 1999
Number of shared co-authors 45
Northwestern University, Center for Genetic Medicine
Career Start Year 1996
Number of shared co-authors 15
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Career Start Year 1994
Number of shared co-authors 19
Genomic Medicine Institute
Career Start Year 1994
Number of shared co-authors 22
Memorial University
Career Start Year 1994
Number of shared co-authors 5
Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Northwest
Career Start Year 1993
Number of shared co-authors 30
Norton Children's Research Institute, University of Louisville School of Medicine
Career Start Year 1992
Number of shared co-authors 10
UNIVERSITY OF MONTREAL
Career Start Year 1991
Number of shared co-authors 5
Murdoch Children's Research Institute
Career Start Year 1990
Number of shared co-authors 8
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Career Start Year 1989
Number of shared co-authors 23
Harvard Medical School, Vanderbilt University, Yale University Yale Law School
Career Start Year 1985
Number of shared co-authors 45
The Heart Institute, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Career Start Year 1975
Number of shared co-authors 36
Johns Hopkins McKusick-Nathans Department of Genetic Medicine
Career Start Year 1974
Number of shared co-authors 7

Collaborators

Center for Biomedical Ethics, Stanford University School of Medicine
Co-authored papers 13
Mayo Clinic
Co-authored papers 7
Stanford University
Co-authored papers 6
Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, Stanford University
Co-authored papers 6
University of Michigan School of Medicine ann arbor
Co-authored papers 5
Stanford University
Co-authored papers 5
Health Ethics and Policy Lab, ETH Zurich
Co-authored papers 5
Stanford University School of Medicine
Co-authored papers 5
University of Washington School of Medicine.
Co-authored papers 5
The Center for Law and the Biosciences, Stanford University
Co-authored papers 5
Center for Genetic Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University
Co-authored papers 5
Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute, University of California san francisco
Co-authored papers 4
The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
Co-authored papers 4
Genomic Medicine Institute, Geisinger Medical Center
Co-authored papers 4
Stanford University
Co-authored papers 4
Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine
Co-authored papers 4
Genomic Medicine Institute
Co-authored papers 4
Center for Medical Genetics, NorthShore University HealthSystem
Co-authored papers 4
Division of Ethics, Department of Medical Humanities and Ethics, Columbia University
Co-authored papers 4
Invitae Corporation
Co-authored papers 4
Institute for Society and Genetics, University of California los angeles
Co-authored papers 4
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania
Co-authored papers 4
Stanford Medicine Clinical Genomics Program
Co-authored papers 4
University of Washington School of Medicine
Co-authored papers 4
Stanford University
Co-authored papers 4
UCL Institute of Child Health and Great Ormond Street NHS Foundation Trust
Co-authored papers 4
Kavli Centre for Ethics, University of Cambridge
Co-authored papers 3
Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics (SCBE), Stanford University
Co-authored papers 3
Clinical Ethics, University of Oxford
Co-authored papers 3
Stanford University
Co-authored papers 3