“…For example, people deemed to be at genetic risk for cancer are increasingly conceptualised as ‘previvors':2 ‘sur vivors of a pre disposition to cancer' – a community seen to have its own unique needs and concerns (see FORCE, 2011). To a lesser extent, scholars have also highlighted the forms of embodied risk stemming from elevated PSA levels (Evans et al , 2007; Gillespie, 2012) and testing positive for HPV (Kavanagh and Broom, 1997; Aronowitz, 2010) – factors associated with heightened prostate and cervical cancer risk, respectively, but that do not in themselves constitute evidence of the disease. This empirical work speaks to the growing diseasification of risk that molecular screening technologies facilitate, with risk ‘treated' in much the same way as disease itself, through medical means such as medication, behaviour modification and surgical intervention (Armstrong, 1995; Sachs, 1995; Clarke et al , 2003, 2010; Aronowitz, 2009; Sulik, 2011; Gillespie, 2012).…”