5 things to do in your 20s and 30s to reduce your risk of preventable cancer
People born after 1990 are more likely to get cancer before the age of 50 than other generations. Here are 5 lifestyle changes that can reduce your risk.
Sarah Allinson has carried out cancer research at Lancaster University for a decade, having received a North West Cancer Research Fellowship in 2004. She began her career as a chemist, completing a PhD in nucleic acids chemistry at the University of Southampton before moving on to work on DNA repair at the Medical Research Council in Oxfordshire.
Her research focuses on how cells respond to damage to their genetic material with a particular interest on the effects of ultraviolet radiation, the main cause of skin cancer.
Sarah also lectures at the University on genetics and cancer biology and works with local charity North West Cancer Research on community outreach activities to raise awareness of issues related to cancer.
People born after 1990 are more likely to get cancer before the age of 50 than other generations. Here are 5 lifestyle changes that can reduce your risk.
Recent reports suggest that cancer rates in UK women are set to rise six times faster than in men over the next two decades.