When risk becomes illness: The personal and social consequences of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia medical surveillance.
Carla Freijomil-VázquezDenise GastaldoCarmen CoronadoMaría-Jesús Movilla-FernándezPublished in: PloS one (2019)
This study is the first to conceptualize CIN medical surveillance as an illness experience for patients. It also problematizes the effects of preventative practices in women's lives. Patients deal with great uncertainty, as CIN medical surveillance performed by gynecologists simultaneously trivializes the changes expected of patients and underestimates the effects of medical recommendations on patients' personal wellbeing and social relations.