Manufacturing My Miracle: One Womans Quest to Create her Personalized Gene Therapy
By (Author) Jill Dopf Viles
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
18th September 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Gene therapy
Memoirs
Hardback
240
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
Who lives Who dies Who decides One woman's quest to save her family from a rare genetic disorder and what it means for our collective genetic future
Jill Dopf Viles's genetic detective story takes readers on an extraordinary journey of scientific discover, personal determination, and bioethical debate. From childhood, Jill knew her body was different - her muscles weak, her tendons tight, and her body fat nearly absent. When doctors failed to diagnose her condition, she became her own researcher, diving deep into genetics to solve the medical mystery that plagued her family for generations.
Her relentless pursuit of answers led to astonishing discoveries, including an unexpected genetic link to Olympic hurdler Priscilla Lopes Schliep. While Jill battles a rare form of muscular dystrophy, Priscilla's mutation in the same gene enhances her athleticism. Their connection, highlighted, on This American Life, is just one of the many remarkable stories in this book.
As the cost of "once and done" gene therapy skyrockets--reaching an astounding $4.25 million per treatment - Jill refuses to wait for pharmaceutical companies to take an interest in her ultra-rare condition. After finding an Italian scientist who will analyze her family's genome from an underground blood draw, she uses her own biotech knowledge, engineering a personalized gene therapy for just $1,500. Scientists at the University of Iowa successfully test the therapy on genetically modified fruit flies with her condition, proving its efficacy.
A deep dive into the ethical dilemmas of personalized genomic medicines, Viles explores urgent questions such as: Who deserves access to life-saving treatments What role should profit play in healthcare Who decides who lives and dies Finally, as Jill stores her homemade viral vector in a freeze, next to frozen waffles, she faces the biggest question of all: should she risk her own health to safe her beloved family members who have her disorder
Jill Viles is a writer, speaker, and DIYscientist with a rare genetic mutation that set her on the path for writing Going Viral. Her writing has appeared in Johns Hopkins Magazine, and her scientific work has been published in Gene and Cells. Jill lives in rural Iowa with her husband, Jeremy, and a lively golden retriever, Yoshi. Learn more about Jill at diyscientist.blog.