Showing posts with label tanning beds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tanning beds. Show all posts

Monday, January 3, 2011

Maternal Influence

Updated 3/2017-- all links (except to my own posts) removed as many are no longer active and it was easier than checking each one.

Not all maternal influence on daughter behavior is good.  Take for example the influence of the unhealthy use of indoor tanning beds as presented in a recent Archives of Dermatology article (full reference below) which “investigated whether indoor tanning with one's mother the first time would influence frequency of tanning later in life and whether it was associated with age of initiation.”
Joel Hillhouse, Ph.D., of East Tennessee State University, Johnson City, and colleagues published a study the May 2010 issue of the Archives of Dermatology which looked at which health-based intervention worked best in reducing skin cancer risks.  They found that “Emphasizing the appearance-damaging effects of UV light, both indoor and outdoor, to young patients who are tanning is important no matter what their pathological tanning behavior status.”
For this study, Hillhouse and colleagues randomly selected a total of 800 female students  who were then sent a screening questionnaire on their indoor tanning history. Those who reported ever indoor tanning (n = 252) were invited to participate in the study and offered an incentive ($5). A total of 227 (mean age, 21.33 years; age range, 18-30 years) agreed, signed informed consent documents, and completed assessments.
One of the questions asked who accompanied the participant the first time they indoor tanned (ie, tanned alone, with friends, with mother, or other).
Of the 227 female participants, 70 were non-tanners; 113 were moderate tanners; and 44 were heavy tanners.
Nearly twice as many participants experienced indoor tanning for the first time with their mother (n = 88) than went alone (n = 45).  First time tanning with their mother was also higher than with a friend (n = 72) or with someone other than their friend or mother (n = 22).
The prevalence of current indoor tanning use among the 88 participants who went with their mother was nearly 81%, with 31.9% reporting heavy tanning.
Adjusting for age and skin type, the researchers found that the participants who reported tanning with their mother during their initial experience were 4.64 times more likely to be heavy current tanners than those who initiated tanning alone or with someone other than their mother
Let’s get out of the tanning beds and go walking or cycling or swimming or dancing or bowling together.  Mothers (and aunts) lets influence our daughters (and nieces) to be more active.
 

Related posts:
Tanning Beds = High Cancer Risk (August 3, 2009)
Skin Cancer: More than Skin Deep – an Article Review (December 14, 2009)
Get Girls to Focus on Skin’s Appearance (May 19, 2010)



REFERENCE
The Effect of Initial Indoor Tanning With Mother on Current Tanning Patterns; Mary Kate Baker, MPH; Joel James Hillhouse, PhD; Xuefeng Liu, PhD; Arch Dermatol. 2010;146(12):1427-1428. doi:10.1001/archdermatol.2010.349

Monday, August 3, 2009

Tanning Beds = High Cancer Risk

Updated 3/2017-- all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. and it was easier than checking each one. 

Finally!  [H/T to Cleveland.com]
After surgery I am often asked, “When can I get back in the tanning bed?”  I say something like, “I would rather you not use a tanning bed.  You need to protect you new scar from the sun, that includes tanning beds, for at least 6 months.”
“But, if I cover up the scar, when can I get back in the tanning bed?” is the usual response.
I then counter with, “IF you feel you must, then yes cover the scars.  Please, limit or reduce the time you spend in the tanning bed.  I would rather you not use a tanning bed.”
Most see “no harm” in using a tanning bed.  After all, it’s not like laying out in the sun for hours.  Too many see tanning beds as a “safe” way to get a tan.  It isn’t.
Experts at the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, the cancer arm of the World Health Organization, have published their analysis of 20 studies online in the medical journal Lancet Oncology.  The analysis concludes the risk of skin cancer jumps by 75 percent when people start using tanning beds before age 30.
These same experts have moved tanning beds and ultraviolet radiation into the top cancer risk category, deeming both to be as deadly as arsenic and mustard gas.  The new classification also puts them in the list of definite causes of cancer, alongside tobacco, the hepatitis B virus and chimney sweeping, among others.
I would not mind tanning bed extinction.  Regular use increased the risk of melanoma.  It is much better to have a “peaches and cream” complexion or to use self-tanning creams.  Skin cancer is no fun.

Related posts:
Sun Protection (March 19, 2009)
Melanoma Review (February 25, 2008)
Skin Cancer—Melanoma (December 8, 2008)