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Comment and Health

Why we need to modernise our emotional relationship with cancer

Cancer has been one of the world's most feared diseases for decades. But this "cancerphobia" no longer matches the evidence and is doing great harm, argues David Ropeik

By David Ropeik

24 April 2024

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Simone Rotella

Worrying news stories about people with cancer seem never-ending, from the famous (Kate Middleton and King Charles) to the not-so-famous (a local nurse, teacher or schoolchild). Small wonder. The condition is often cruel, and a common killer. It also has unique psychological characteristics that make it particularly fearsome.

We are more frightened by threats over which we feel we have no control, that cause great pain, that we have personally experienced and that feel imposed on us. More than any other disease, cancer triggers all those alarms, which helps explain why it has been the most dreaded illness

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