
Dr Rebecca Lynch
Lecturer
Overview
I’m an anthropologist with an interest in bodies and in biomedicine, and how these are constructed and categorised in different contexts.
I am Lecturer in Medical Anthropology based at the Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health (WCCEH) and completed my PhD in Social Anthropology at University College London (UCL). My research draws on examples of different topics (often within biomedicine) to explore the dynamic, changing, fluid body and its boundaries, moral aspects of health and medicine, and (bio)medical categorisations (including those created through notions of risk and health technologies).
Taking the body as always situated and contingent, in the process of becoming and being ‘made’, my work includes a focus on the role of the more-than-human (technologies, bodily fluids, spirit agents, material ‘stuff’) and attends to embedded values and assumptions particularly in relation to moral framings, hierarchies and power dynamics, and the creation/widening of health inequalities. Rather than gathering ‘social’ or ‘cultural’ accounts of health, illness and the body and applying these to, or viewing these as separate from, biomedical constructions, I am interested in the dynamic interchanges and co-constitute entities and relationships through which health, illness, bodies, and biomedicine itself are created.
I have undertaken fieldwork with Evangelical Christians in Trinidad (the subject of my 2020 monograph ‘The Devil is Disorder’, published by Berghahn) and on biomedical constructions of the body and health in different settings in the UK (particularly within public health and in the care and management of chronic conditions).
I have two ongoing and inter-related projects: fluid bodies (pieces of work exploring the body through fluids and ideas of fluidity) and categorising and aligning ‘disease’ and ‘experience’ (pieces of work exploring biomedical classifications, what these ‘do’, and the difficult alignment of biology and biography).
I am co-investigator (leading the social science element) on two NIHR-funded projects allowing me to explore these ideas through caring for liver disease and novel technologies to monitor asthma symptoms.
I am co-editor of the 'Health, Technology and Society' book series with Prof. Martyn Pickersgill (published by Palgrave), a member of the editorial board of Anthropology and Medicine, and recently served on the Council of the Royal Anthropological Institute (RAI).
I lead the Bodies, Environments, Inequalities Group (BEIG) and WCCEHS's 'Lifecourse' theme. I teach on the MA Cultures and Environments of Health as well as contributing to other teaching on the body, health and illness within SPSPA.
List of publications can be found here: Rebecca Lynch - Google Scholar
Research
- fluid bodies, bodily fluids, bodily boundaries
- health technologies, especially in relation to the body and the 'doing' of medicine
- entangled histories of bodies, place, and environments
- biomedical categories and categorisation
- values, morality, and religion in relation to the body, health and illness
I have two ongoing and inter-related research projects:
Fluid bodies- pieces of work exploring the body through fluids and ideas of fluidity. This includes how and where bodily boundaries are made through different practices, for example in distinguishing between human bodies and the non-human (e.g. technologies, environments). Following previous work on blood donation and urinary incontinence, my current project looks at the fluid body through liver disease (I am co-investigator and social science lead on an NIHR-funded project on care and experiences of liver disease in the NHS). Through ethnography of liver care and transplantation units and interviews with staff and patients, the project examines how overlapping histories of people, place, health services and bodies (including the relationships formed between clinical staff and patients) may co-create this health condition, liver care, and different inequalities.
Categorising and aligning ‘disease’ and ‘experience’- pieces of work exploring biomedical classifications, what these ‘do’ (particularly in relation to moral framings), and how ‘experience’ is positioned in relation to ‘evidence’ and biology aligned to biography (for example, through health technologies). Developing out of earlier research on Evangelical Christian constructions of the body and health, and more recent work on health technologies and on the ‘problem’ of multimorbidity, I am currently following two strands in this area: how novel technologies shift understandings, experiences and categories around asthma and asthma care, and what asthma then ‘is’ through these (I am co-investigator and qualitative research lead on an NIHR-funded project on novel technologies to manage childhood asthma); the category of ‘lived experience’ in biomedicine, exploring how this is mobilised and constructs ‘health’ and the actors involved in producing health.
My previous work has explored:
- anxiety, risk, spirit agents and subjectivity and how these link to experiences of marginalisation and the construction of the Christian body in Trinidad
- bodily boundaries and relationships between bodies and technologies through self-monitoring health technologies, blood donation equipment, and technologies to treat and manage female urinary incontinence
- health, place and the constructions of the body and biomedical categories in relation to multimorbidity
Research group links
Supervision
I welcome hearing from students interested in conducting PhD work that speaks to any of my research interests, particularly where there is a focus on bodies, biomedical categories/classifications and structures, and/or exploration of health technologies.
Research students
Current PhD supervision: Cathrin Fischer (SPSPA/WCCEH)
Publications
Copyright Notice: Any articles made available for download are for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the copyright holder.
| 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2009 | 2008 | 2007 |
2024
- Kedzior SGE, Barrett S, Muir C, Lynch R, Kaner E, Forman JR, Wolfe I, McGovern R. (2024) "They had clothes on their back and they had food in their stomach, but they didn't have me": The contribution of parental mental health problems, substance use, and domestic violence and abuse on young people and parents, Child Abuse Negl, volume 149, DOI:10.1016/j.chiabu.2023.106609. [PDF]
- Barrett S, Muir C, Burns S, Adjei N, Forman J, Hackett S, Hirve R, Kaner E, Lynch R, Taylor-Robinson D. (2024) Interventions to Reduce Parental Substance Use, Domestic Violence and Mental Health Problems, and Their Impacts Upon Children's Well-Being: A Systematic Review of Reviews and Evidence Mapping, Trauma Violence Abuse, volume 25, no. 1, pages 393-412, DOI:10.1177/15248380231153867. [PDF]
2023
- Lynch R, Pickersgill M. (2023) Series Editors’ Preface.
- Dewez JE, Nijman RG, Fitchett EJA, Lynch R, de Groot R, van der Flier M, Philipsen R, Vreugdenhil H, Ettelt S, Yeung S. (2023) Adoption of C-reactive protein point-of-care tests for the management of acute childhood infections in primary care in the Netherlands and England: a comparative health systems analysis, BMC Health Services Research, volume 23, no. 1, DOI:10.1186/s12913-023-09065-8.
- Lynch R, Pickersgill M. (2023) Series editors’ preface.
2022
- Lynch R, Pickersgill M. (2022) Series Editors’ Preface.
- Lynch R, Pickersgill M. (2022) Series editors’ preface.
- Green J, Lynch R. (2022) Rethinking chronicity: public health and the problem of temporality, Critical Public Health, volume 32, DOI:10.1080/09581596.2022.2101432.
- Lynch R, Hanckel B, Green J. (2022) The (failed) promise of multimorbidity: chronicity, biomedical categories, and public health, CRITICAL PUBLIC HEALTH, volume 32, no. 4, pages 450-461, DOI:10.1080/09581596.2021.2017854. [PDF]
2021
- Geary RS, Gurol-Urganci I, Mamza JB, Lynch R, El-Hamamsy D, Wilson A, Cohn S, Tincello D, van der Meulen J. (2021) Variation in availability and use of surgical care for female urinary incontinence: a mixed-methods study, Health and Social Care Delivery Research, volume 9, no. 7, pages 1-94, DOI:10.3310/hsdr09070.
- Lynch R, Toozs-Hobson P, Duckett J, Tincello D, Cohn S. (2021) Making a decision about surgery for female urinary incontinence: a qualitative study of women's views, INTERNATIONAL UROGYNECOLOGY JOURNAL, volume 32, no. 1, pages 127-133, DOI:10.1007/s00192-020-04383-5. [PDF]
- Soley-Bori M, Ashworth M, Bisquera A, Dodhia H, Lynch R, Wang Y, Fox-Rushby J. (2021) Impact of multimorbidity on healthcare costs and utilisation: a systematic review of the UK literature, BRITISH JOURNAL OF GENERAL PRACTICE, volume 71, no. 702, pages E39-E46, DOI:10.3399/bjgp20X713897. [PDF]
- Lynch R. (2021) Living in the end of days: risk, anxiety, subjectivity and the devil in a Trinidadian village, ANTHROPOLOGY & MEDICINE, volume 28, no. 1, pages 47-61, DOI:10.1080/13648470.2021.1888547. [PDF]
- Lynch R, Sturm T, Webster J. (2021) Apocalyptic futures: morality, health and wellbeing at the end of the world, ANTHROPOLOGY & MEDICINE, volume 28, no. 1, pages 1-12, DOI:10.1080/13648470.2021.1888548. [PDF]
2020
- Lynch R. (2020) Of flesh and mesh: Time, materiality, and health in surgical recovery, Medical Materialities. Toward a material culture of medical anthropology, Routledge, 23-35.
2019
- Cohn S, Lynch R. (2019) Posthumanism and Public Health, Routledge.
- Lynch R. (2019) The devil is disorder: Bodies, spirits and misfortune in a trinidadian village.
2018
- Littlewood R, Lynch R. (2018) Cosmos, Gods and Madmen Frameworks in the Anthropologies of Medicine, Berghahn Books.
- Cohn S, Lynch R. (2018) Posthumanism and Public Health, Routledge.
- Podmore B, Hutchings A, Durand M, Robson J, Konan S, van der Meulen J, Lynch R. (2018) P51 Comorbidities and the clinical pathway to access joint replacement surgery: an exploratory qualitative study, Poster presentations, Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health, volume 72, no. Suppl 1, pages a83-a83, DOI:10.1136/jech-2018-ssmabstracts.175.
- Lynch R, Cohn S. (2018) Donor understandings of blood and the body in relation to more frequent donation, Vox Sang, volume 113, no. 4, pages 350-356, DOI:10.1111/vox.12641. [PDF]
- Holman D, Lynch R, Reeves A. (2018) How do health behaviour interventions take account of social context? A literature trend and co-citation analysis, HEALTH, volume 22, no. 4, pages 389-410, DOI:10.1177/1363459317695630. [PDF]
- Podmore B, Hutchings A, Durand M-A, Robson J, Konan S, van der Meulen J, Lynch R. (2018) Comorbidities and the referral pathway to access joint replacement surgery: an exploratory qualitative study, BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, volume 18, article no. ARTN 754, DOI:10.1186/s12913-018-3565-0. [PDF]
2017
- Farrington C, Lynch R. (2017) Personal Medical Devices: People and Technology in the Context of Health, Quantified Lives and Vital Data, Palgrave Macmillan, 3-3.
- Lynch R, Farrington C. (2017) Quantified Lives and Vital Data Exploring Health and Technology through Personal Medical Devices, Springer.
- Lynch R. (2017) Slippery Slopes and Trojan Horses: The Construction of E-Cigarettes as Risky Objects in Public Health Debate, Quantified Lives and Vital Data, Springer Nature, 179-200, DOI:10.1057/978-1-349-95235-9_8.
- Lynch R, Cohn S. (2017) Beyond the person: the construction and transformation of blood as a resource, CRITICAL PUBLIC HEALTH, volume 27, no. 3, pages 362-372, DOI:10.1080/09581596.2017.1297384. [PDF]
- Cohn S, Lynch R. (2017) Posthuman perspectives: relevance for a global public health, CRITICAL PUBLIC HEALTH, volume 27, no. 3, pages 285-292, DOI:10.1080/09581596.2017.1302557. [PDF]
- Cohn S, Lynch R. (2017) Diverse bodies: the challenge of new theoretical approaches to medical anthropology, ANTHROPOLOGY & MEDICINE, volume 24, no. 2, pages 131-141, DOI:10.1080/13648470.2017.1334395. [PDF]
- Cohn S, Lynch R. (2017) Falling into a routine: from habits to situated practices, SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS, volume 39, no. 8, pages 1398-1411, DOI:10.1111/1467-9566.12597. [PDF]
2016
- Littlewood R, Lynch R. (2016) Introduction: Divinity, Disease, Distress, Cosmos, Gods and Madmen: Frameworks in the Anthropologies of Medicine, Berghahn.
- Lynch R. (2016) Cosmologies of fear: The medicalization of anxiety in contemporary Britain, Cosmos, Gods and Madmen. Frameworks in the Anthropologies of Medicine, Berghahn.
- Littlewood R, Lynch R. (2016) Cosmos, Gods and Madmen Frameworks in the Anthropologies of Medicine, Berghahn Books.
- Lynch R, Cohn S. (2016) In the loop: Practices of self-monitoring from accounts by trial participants, HEALTH, volume 20, no. 5, pages 523-538, DOI:10.1177/1363459315611939. [PDF]
2014
- Lynch R. (2014) Obeah and other powers: the politics of Caribbean religion and healing, ANTHROPOLOGY & MEDICINE, volume 21, no. 1, pages 103-105, DOI:10.1080/13648470.2014.883359. [PDF]
- Phillips G, Bottomley C, Schmidt E, Tobi P, Lais S, Yu G, Lynch R, Lock K, Draper A, Moore D. (2014) Well London Phase-1: results among adults of a cluster-randomised trial of a community engagement approach to improving health behaviours and mental well-being in deprived inner-city neighbourhoods, JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH, volume 68, no. 7, pages 606-614, DOI:10.1136/jech-2013-202505. [PDF]
- Phillips G, Bottomley C, Schmidt E, Tobi P, Lais S, Yu G, Lynch R, Lock K, Draper A, Moore D. (2014) Measures of exposure to the Well London Phase-1 intervention and their association with health well-being and social outcomes, JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH, volume 68, no. 7, pages 597-605, DOI:10.1136/jech-2013-202507. [PDF]
- Derges J, Clow A, Lynch R, Jain S, Phillips G, Petticrew M, Renton A, Draper A. (2014) 'Well London' and the benefits of participation: results of a qualitative study nested in a cluster randomised trial, BMJ Open, volume 4, no. 4, DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003596. [PDF]
2013
- Lynch R. (2013) ‘Without prayer you have nothing’: Prayer in uncertain times in Trinidad, Annual Review of the Sociology of Religion, volume 4, pages 157-172, DOI:10.1163/9789004260498_010.
2012
- Jain S, Draper A, Clow A, Lynch R, Derges J. (2012) WHAT SHAPES PARTICIPATION IN A COMMUNITY-BASED INTERVENTION? EVIDENCE FROM A QUALITATIVE EVALUATION OF THE WELL LONDON PROJECT, JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH, volume 66, pages A3-A3, DOI:10.1136/jech-2012-201753.007. [PDF]
- Derges J, Draper A, Clow A, Lynch R, Jain S. (2012) PROCESSES OF CHANGE: WHAT ARE THE SPECIFIC PATHWAYS AND PROJECT COMPONENTS THAT HAVE A POSITIVE IMPACT ON THE WELL-BEING OF PARTICIPANTS IN A 'WELL LONDON' PROJECT?, JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH, volume 66, pages A57-A57, DOI:10.1136/jech-2012-201753.147. [PDF]
- Derges J, Lynch R, Clow A, Petticrew M, Draper A. (2012) Complaints about dog faeces as a symbolic representation of incivility in London, UK: a qualitative study, Crit Public Health, volume 22, no. 4, pages 419-425, DOI:10.1080/09581596.2012.710738. [PDF]
2011
- Murphy S, Moore GF, Tapper K, Lynch R, Clarke R, Raisanen L, Desousa C, Moore L. (2011) Free healthy breakfasts in primary schools: a cluster randomised controlled trial of a policy intervention in Wales, UK, Public Health Nutr, volume 14, no. 2, pages 219-226, DOI:10.1017/S1368980010001886. [PDF]
2009
- Wall M, Hayes R, Moore D, Petticrew M, Clow A, Schmidt E, Draper A, Lock K, Lynch R, Renton A. (2009) Evaluation of community level interventions to address social and structural determinants of health: a cluster randomised controlled trial, BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, volume 9, article no. ARTN 207, DOI:10.1186/1471-2458-9-207. [PDF]
2008
- Tapper K, Murphy S, Lynch R, Clark R, Moore GF, Moore L. (2008) Development of a scale to measure 9-11-year-olds' attitudes towards breakfast, Eur J Clin Nutr, volume 62, no. 4, pages 511-518, DOI:10.1038/sj.ejcn.1602735. [PDF]
- Warren E, Parry O, Lynch R, Murphy S. (2008) 'If I don't like it then I can choose what I want': Welsh school children's accounts of preference for and control over food choice, HEALTH PROMOTION INTERNATIONAL, volume 23, no. 2, pages 144-151, DOI:10.1093/heapro/dam045. [PDF]
2007
- Moore GF, Tapper K, Murphy S, Clark R, Lynch R, Moore L. (2007) Validation of a self-completion measure of breakfast foods, snacks and fruits and vegetables consumed by 9- to 11-year-old schoolchildren, Eur J Clin Nutr, volume 61, no. 3, pages 420-430, DOI:10.1038/sj.ejcn.1602531. [PDF]
- Tapper K, Murphy S, Moore L, Lynch R, Clark R. (2007) Evaluating the free school breakfast initiative in Wales: methodological issues, BRITISH FOOD JOURNAL, volume 109, no. 2-3, pages 206-215, DOI:10.1108/00070700710732538. [PDF]
- Moore GF, Tapper K, Murphy S, Lynch R, Raisanen L, Pimm C, Moore L. (2007) Associations between deprivation, attitudes towards eating breakfast and breakfast eating behaviours in 9-11-year-olds, PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION, volume 10, no. 6, pages 582-589, DOI:10.1017/S1368980007699558. [PDF]
- Moore L, Moore GF, Tapper K, Lynch R, Desousa C, Hale J, Roberts C, Murphy S. (2007) Free breakfasts in schools: design and conduct of a cluster randomised controlled trial of the Primary School Free Breakfast Initiative in Wales [ISRCTN18336527], BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, volume 7, article no. ARTN 258, DOI:10.1186/1471-2458-7-258. [PDF]