scholarly journals Revisiting Candidacy: What Might It Offer Cancer Prevention?

Author(s):  
Samantha Batchelor ◽  
Emma R. Miller ◽  
Belinda Lunnay ◽  
Sara Macdonald ◽  
Paul Ward

The notion of candidacy emerged three decades ago through Davison and colleagues’ exploration of people’s understanding of the causes of coronary heart disease. Candidacy was a mechanism to estimate one’s own or others risk of disease informed by their lay epidemiology. It could predict who would develop illness or explain why someone succumbed to it. Candidacy’s predictive ability, however, was fallible, and it was from this perspective that the public’s reticence to adhere to prevention messages could be explained, as ultimately anybody could be ‘at-risk’. This work continues to resonate in health research, with over 700 citations of Davison’s Candidacy paper. Less explored however, is the candidacy framework in its entirety in other illness spheres, where prevention efforts could potentially impact health outcomes. This paper revisits the candidacy framework to reconsider it use within prevention. In doing so, candidacy within coronary heart disease, suicide prevention, diabetes, and cancer will be examined, and key components of candidacy and how people negotiate their candidacy within differing disease contexts will be uncovered. The applicability of candidacy to address modifiable breast cancer risk factors or cancer prevention more broadly will be considered, as will the implications for public health policy.

Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (21) ◽  
pp. 5552
Author(s):  
Una Mary McVeigh ◽  
John William Tepper ◽  
Terri Patricia McVeigh

Cancer in adolescents and young adults (AYAs) deserves special consideration for several reasons. AYA cancers encompass paediatric malignancies that present at an older age than expected, or early-onset of cancers that are typically observed in adults. However, disease diagnosed in the AYA population is distinct to those same cancers which are diagnosed in a paediatric or older adult setting. Worse disease-free and overall survival outcomes are observed in the AYA setting, and the incidence of AYA cancers is increasing. Knowledge of an individual’s underlying cancer predisposition can influence their clinical care and may facilitate early tumour surveillance strategies and cascade testing of at-risk relatives. This information can further influence reproductive decision making. In this review we discuss the risk factors contributing to AYA breast cancer, such as heritable predisposition, environmental, and lifestyle factors. We also describe a number of risk models which incorporate genetic factors that aid clinicians in quantifying an individual’s lifetime risk of disease.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 498-498
Author(s):  
L. J. Filer

The Committee on Nutrition report on "Childhood Diet and Coronary Heart Disease" may appear "typical and old-fashioned" even though it highlights total calories and intake of saturated fats as recommended by Dr. Stare. The recommendation that unproven preventive measures be tested in a group at high risk of disease is good experimental design. The testing of extremes to evaluate an unproven effect can save considerable research dollars and effort. Based on the findings from genetically defined populations, a more meaningful approach can be made to the population at large.


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