A Cambridge researcher shares how being diagnosed with an elevated cancer risk transformed her relationship with her body – and why her findings matter for thousands of people undergoing screening
When Elspeth Davies was diagnosed with melanoma as a teenager, she could not have imagined that her personal experience would eventually inform a four-year doctoral research project exploring one of modern medicine’s most challenging paradoxes: what it means to live with the statistical possibility of developing a potentially fatal disease.
Now completing her PhD at the University of Cambridge, Davies has published a deeply personal account in the British Medical Journal explaining how her diagnosis of elevated cancer risk damaged her relationship with her own body – and how she learned to repair it. Her work, funded by Cancer Research UK, represents a rare intersection between medical anthropology and lived patient experience, offering new insights into the psychological impact of cancer screening and early detection programmes.
The Personal Becomes ResearchDavies’ doctoral thesis explores how some cancers have been transformed from invariably fatal diseases into potentially avoidable and curable conditions through prevention and early detection efforts. But her work goes far beyond academic theory. For eighteen months, she conducted ethnographic fieldwork – essentially immersive research – with both scientists developing new cancer screening devices and patients living with diagnoses of Barrett’s oesophagus, a condition that significantly increases the risk of oesophageal cancer.
Her focus on Barrett’s oesophagus is particularly relevant to UK patients. Those diagnosed with this condition are offered regular surveillance with endoscopies – small cameras inserted through the mouth to examine the food pipe – in an attempt to detect abnormal cell changes before they become cancerous. This represents the modern approach to cancer control: prevention and early detection rather than treatment of advanced disease.
Yet Davies’ research reveals a critical gap between how medical professionals frame this screening and how patients actually experience it.
The Problem With StatisticsIn a groundbreaking blog published by the BMJ, Davies explains the tension at the heart of modern cancer prevention: epidemiologists view risk as a statistical abstraction – what tends to happen in particular populations – whilst patients experience risk as a personal, embodied reality.
For epidemiologists studying Barrett’s oesophagus, risk is a number. Studies show that people with Barrett’s have an increased chance of developing oesophageal cancer in their lifetime compared to those without it. However, most people diagnosed with Barrett’s will never develop cancer. Screening is therefore offered at a population level, with the hope of improving outcomes for the small minority who will go on to develop malignancies.
But for patients receiving a diagnosis of elevated cancer risk, the experience is fundamentally different. As Davies discovered through her research, individuals become acutely aware that they could be “the one” who develops a deadly cancer – no matter how statistically improbable this may be. The gap between population-level thinking and personal fear creates what she describes as a damaging disconnect between how patients are cared for and how they actually feel.
Beyond Medical DiagnosisWhat makes Davies’ work particularly significant is her anthropological perspective. She does not view patients with cancer risk diagnoses as simply clinical cases requiring surveillance. Instead, she asks a deeper question: what does it mean to provide care for people who are not currently ill but might become so in the future?
This reframing has profound implications. Davies writes candidly about how her own teenage melanoma diagnosis shaped her approach to this research. For her, and for the patients she spoke with during her fieldwork, a cancer risk diagnosis represented a rupture in how they understood their own bodies. The body that was previously simply their own – a vehicle for living – became something to be monitored, watched, and ultimately mistrusted.
Her research explores how patients navigate this psychological landscape: how they make meaningful, good lives when presented with statistical possibilities of future illness. This is not a question that conventional medical training typically addresses. Yet it is arguably one of the most important questions facing modern healthcare.
Reshaping Cancer PreventionDavies’ findings speak to a growing recognition within UK healthcare that cancer prevention and early detection programmes must account for the psychological and emotional dimensions of living with risk. The NHS continues to expand screening programmes across multiple cancer types – cervical, bowel, breast, and lung cancer screening are all offered to eligible patients across the country. Understanding how these programmes affect patients’ relationship with their own bodies is essential for improving both the design and delivery of these services.
Her work also highlights the distinction between individual and population health goals – a tension that becomes particularly acute during periods when the NHS faces resource pressures, as has been the case in recent years.
Source: @bmj_latest
Key Takeaways
- A Cambridge researcher’s personal experience of melanoma diagnosis has informed doctoral research into how cancer risk diagnoses affect patients’ psychological wellbeing and body image
- There is a significant gap between how medical professionals view cancer risk (as statistical population-level probability) and how patients experience it (as personal, embodied threat)
- Patients diagnosed with elevated cancer risk, such as those with Barrett’s oesophagus, often struggle to maintain a healthy relationship with their bodies whilst undergoing surveillance
- Anthropological research into patient experience is helping to reshape how healthcare professionals approach cancer screening and early detection
What This Means for Kent Residents
Thousands of Kent residents participate in NHS screening programmes each year, including cervical, bowel, and breast cancer screening delivered through NHS Kent and Medway services. Davies’ research underscores the importance of healthcare providers not only delivering effective screening but also supporting the emotional and psychological needs of patients receiving cancer risk diagnoses. If you have received a cancer risk diagnosis and are struggling with anxiety or body image concerns, speak with your GP, who can refer you to psychological support services available through NHS mental health teams in Kent and Medway. Your concerns are valid and support is available.


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