Posts Tagged ‘teen skincancer’

A Happy, HEALTHY Father’s Day for Dad AND Kids

Saturday, June 18th, 2011

Our best wishes for a happy and HEALTHY Father’s Day!  And apropos to that, WebMD posted an excellent reminder about the need to protect young children from the sun because “the changes that lead to skin cancer may actually begin during baby’s first year, when an infant’s skin is most vulnerable to burns and sun damage, according to a new report in the July issue of Pediatrics.”  So, here’s a reminder of best sun safety practices for kids…and even kids at heart:

“A child’s skin has structural quality that makes it more vulnerable to the effects of UV radiation, and this can result in an increased risk of later skin cancer,” said Roya Samuels, MD, a pediatrician at the Steven and Alexandra Cohen Children’s Medical Center of New York in New Hyde Park.

New York City dermatologist Doris Day, MD, says that “newborns, infants, and toddlers have skin that is continuing to develop…and it is really important to protect it,” she says.

However,  it’s not easy to find sunscreen for infants and toddlers: “Sunscreens for infants must be non-irritating to the skin and eyes…” For both these reasons, for the first six months, infants should be covered from direct sun via clothing, hats, etc., This is also important since harmful rays can penetrate car and home windows. (Consider clear protective window coatings.)

EWG-dadimage Then, in selecting a sunscreen, with a minimum SPF of 15, many parents “may prefer that infant sunscreen leave a temporary film so they can be sure all exposed body parts are well covered. In addition, water-resistance is an important quality for infant and toddler sunscreens….” as is the need to ensure a sunscreen blocks against both UVA and UVB rays.  The thicker zinc- or titanium-based products are more opaque and sit on skin more than getting absorbed.  “…And zinc and titanium don’t irritate the eyes as much because they tend to stay in place.”  babyganics-coverup-baby-sunscreen-mdn

We shared the Environmental Working Guide’s new rating of more than 1,000 sun products in our last post.  And The Daily Green culled through that list to post their selections from that list of the 13 most affordable natural kid and baby sunscreens with mineral sunblocks.

As mentioned in WebMD:

Ravinder Khaira, MD, a pediatrician with Sutter Independent Physicians in Sacramento, Calif., says that applying sunscreen — and reapplying it according to the directions — is the No. 1 way to prevent sunburn and sun damage that can lead to skin cancers when children grow up.

Take special care to cover their ears, nose, and scalp, he says.

Young children do have highly sensitive skin, so it’s a good idea to do a small patch test before slathering on a new sunscreen. “Test it on the forearm and wait about 30 to 40 minutes to see if any hives, swelling, redness, or itchiness occur,” Khaira says.

If children get sunscreen in their eyes, flush their eyes and face with cold water to minimize any irritation, he says.

It’s not always easy being a dad…or a mom.  But once the kids are slathered up, you can sit back and rest.  For a second.

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A moving video: “Dear 16 year-old me…”

Thursday, May 19th, 2011

We thought this was an impactful video from the David Cornfield Melanoma Fund, a Canadian non-profit doing a good job of raising awareness among young people and their caregivers about the importance of prevention and early detection of Melanoma.  This Public Service Announcement speaks for itself…and for many who are no longer able to tell their story of melanoma.  Please share with everyone…and especially every 16 year old… that you know:

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If you must tan…

Friday, April 15th, 2011

There is still a feeling by many that tan-looking skin is preferable to pale.  We’re still working to buck this perception Rome wasn’t built in a day. So, for those who still want the glow but have at least gotten the message that they should do it without the sun, here are some suggestions by NBC’s Today Show  style editor, Bobbie Thomas on the best of sunless tanners.

Note: this is not an endorsement of any particular product…just an endorsement of getting the look you want in a safer way:

1. First up, cult favorite “Big Bronzer” by Cargo Cosmetics. The jumbo oversized palette will instantlBuzz from Bobbie Thomas_1302394347737y warm up your face or body. With just a hint of shimmer, you can quickly apply a little or a lot for a natural looking glow.
2. For an even easy-to-apply application simply swipe on a little color… Kate Somerville’s Tanning Towelettes are paraben-free, streak-free and mess-free, while Dr. Denese’s Glow Younger Self-Tanning Gloves will do the same and offer anti-aging benefits.
3. New on the bronzing scene is Temptu’s Summer Skin 3 Step Air Pod system–perfect for die-hard spray tan fans who want to give it a go at home.
4. Last but not least, if you want a faux glow without the long-term commitment, L’Oreal and St. Tropez both offer great “1 Day” options that easily wash away with soap & water.

PS:  The timing has never been better for encouraging your teen to try sunless tanners. According to the American Academy of Dermatology, which officially opposes indoor tanning and supports a ban on indoor tanning for non-medical purposes, most tanning salon patrons are white females in their teens and 20s.  And not coincidentally they also point out:

  • Melanoma is the second most common form of cancer for adolescents and young adults 15-29 years old.
  • Melanoma is increasing faster in females ages 15-29 than males in the same age group. The torso is the most common location for developing skin cancer which may be due to deliberate tanning.
  • Studies have demonstrated that exposure to UV radiation during indoor tanning can lead to skin aging, immune suppression, and eye damage, including cataracts and ocular melanoma.
  • So consider Bobbie’s sunless tanners recommendations or take those of the AADA and just say no to tans altogether.

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    An Old Story About Tanning

    Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

    On the heels of my last post, showing supermodel Marissa Miller in just the skin she’s striving to protect from sun damage, Allure Magazine coincidentally polled readers on their tanning habits. In sync with about 72% of participants in a poll by American Academy of Dermatology,  results from a survey done by Emory University on on HotorNot.com showed most respondents feel that tanner just looks, well, sexier and, sadly, healthier.

    Most distressing is still the lack of concern about the clear correlation between tanning and skin cancers, even when that risk is specifically explained. On ABCnews.com Dr. Audrey Kunin said:

    It’s incredibly difficult to get someone not to do something that perceive as providing them with a positive perception. It was the same thing with smoking. Especially younger people have a hard time seeing themselves as getting older and having to deal with these risks. … “All of my younger melanoma patients, girls in their early twenties, have been tanning bed users,” says Kunin.  She tries to put things into perspective by pointing out that twenty minutes in a tanning bed is the same as an entire day on the beach with no sun block, but she says that until they have skin cancer, it’s hard to get people really to understand the risk.”

    So what DOES resonate with young tanners?  Good old human vanity and fear of aging, according to the story in Allure:

    In another recent study…[2/3rds] of women who saw the effects smoking would have on their faces vowed to give up their bad habit…as a direct consequence of seeing how their appearance will change.

    Harvard Department of Dermatology’s Dr. Kristina Collins suggests the young person who is tanning addicted ask an older friend or relative, such as their mom or grandmother, to show them their sun-exposed forearm up against the more more sun-protected abdomen.  The arm skin will usually look much older compared to the skin on their stomach, and “the young people will usually be pretty surprised by what they see….freckles, age spots, poor skin tone” compared to the stomach skin, which can often look 30 years younger.  That, she says, may help them to redefine “what’s hot” — tanning and aging faster, or not.

    The tan transition aid? Spray tans and other self-tanners…  And more celebrities coming out and taking a stand — naked or not! — about sun safety.

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    One Patient’s Goal: Raise Melanoma Awareness

    Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

    As you may know, MoleSafe’s origins are from MoleMap, which has gained a position as the “gold standard” for melanoma screenings in countries with some of the highest occurrence of the disease: New Zealand and Australia. It doesn’t matter where one lives, as the sun warms our planet everywhere…but some are more exposed more intensively.

    Story of Melanoma patient's fight for life, and to raise awareness.

    Story of Melanoma patient's fight for life, and to raise awareness.

    So we bring you this journey of Alan Lewis, from 3News. Alan, a record-setting speed boat racer, is a melanoma patient from New Zealand and now in a race for his life. He’s making it his mission to shine a worldwide light on the need for early detection of skin cancer by allowing a series of videos to follow his fight. Though his situation is dire, we thank him for his candor and bravery and by sharing it here hope to help that goal.

    In the video, Alan mentions the challenge of a self-skin exam. As we suggested in a post from February, a great way to “love the one you’re with” is a mutual skin exam as a first line of defense. But best practices? Book your own thorough screening at a MoleSafe location today.

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    One Patient's Goal: Raise Melanoma Awareness

    Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

    As you may know, MoleSafe’s origins are from MoleMap, which has gained a position as the “gold standard” for melanoma screenings in countries with some of the highest occurrence of the disease:  New Zealand and Australia.  It doesn’t matter where one lives, as the sun warms our planet everywhere…but some are more exposed more intensively.

    Story of Melanoma patient's fight for life, and to raise awareness.

    Story of Melanoma patient's fight for life, and to raise awareness.

    So we bring you this journey of Alan Lewis, from 3News. Alan, a record-setting speed boat racer, is a melanoma patient from New Zealand and now in a race for his life.  He’s making it his mission to shine a worldwide light on the need for early detection of skin cancer by allowing a series of videos to follow his fight. Though his situation is dire, we thank him for his candor and bravery and by sharing it here hope to help that goal.

    In the video, Alan mentions the challenge of a self-skin exam. As we suggested in a post from February, a great way to “love the one you’re with” is a mutual skin exam as a first line of defense. But best practices? Book your own thorough screening at a MoleSafe location today.

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    More exciting news from MoleSafe

    Thursday, July 1st, 2010

    UPDATE: New Yorkers, set your DVR and Don’t Miss MoleSafe with Dr. Max Gomez

    This Thursday (new date), 7/8, at 5:45A and 6:45A hours, please look for my interview with Dr. Max Gomez on WCBS-TV (channel 2), when we’ll discuss advances in melanoma detection and our new clinic at NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER, the first Hospital in the United States to offer MoleSafe’s cutting-edge Melanoma detection service.

    New Jersey MoleSafe associate appointed Chairman of Governor’s Cancer Prevention Task Force

    As noted in the Asbury Park Press, our own Dr. Jarrod Kaufman, a surgeon on staff at CentraState Medical Center in Freehold Township which recently added the MoleSafe program to their screening services, has been appointed New Jersey chairman of the American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer (CoC) Cancer Liaison Program. He is also the chairman of the melanoma work group of the New Jersey Governor’s Task Force on Cancer Prevention, Early Detection and Treatment. We are proud such an esteemed physician is a proponent of our screening services.

    Oh – and one more note: MoleSafe is proud to welcome not only CentraState Medical Center to our family of MoleSafe screening locations, but now Nancy N. and J. C. Lewis Cancer & Research Pavilion at St. Joseph’s/Candler in Savannah, GA as well. Check out all of our locations and get an appointment to get checked out today.

    Tanning and Taxes

    Cancer prevention is a timely topic with the big summer holiday upon us. But it’s not just sun-protection while having outdoor fun that is getting press. CBS Evening News was one of many covering the new 10% sales tax that kicked in today on tanning salons. See the full story here at the 13:35 mark.

    Have a fun and sun-smart holiday weekend!

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    Vampire Chic?

    Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

    I’ve mentioned the increased rates in skin cancer among young people – primarily young women – due to tanning beds and more So this style article about vampire chic in the UK  “warmed my heart.” Twilight: Pale 'vampire' looks saves livesTurns out pop culture is tuning in to the skin cancer awareness message if even, for now, inadvertently. The movie franchise, Twilight, has been box office gold and been keeping skins pale.

    Starry-eyed teens have been flocking to make-up shops to recreate the waxy-white look of Brit hunk Pattinson’s bloodthirsty character Edward Cullen.

    And health chiefs say the trend will drive down skin cancer rates as more fashion-conscious youngsters ditch the sunbed tan.

    Now, as long as we don’t start drawing inspiration again from Rosie O’Donnell or a contemporary version of the tanned Coco Channel like I wrote about back in December, we’ll be okay.

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    Facts Don’t Lie on These Beds

    Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

    We think of summer fun and we’re reminded to think of safe sun exposure. But what about when winter comes? Too many of us — either in pursuit of SAD relief via a warm-weather getaway, or misguided goals of maintaining a tan — don’t stay conscious of skin protection year round. And skin cancers are increasing, especially among young women.

    As we noted in a previous post about tanning bed bans for teens in England, there is real danger from even “artificial sun”…and with more research findings exposed recently, it’s even worse than we thought.

    Let’s face facts:

    • Nearly 30 million people tan indoors in the US, every year. And more than one-third are teens.
    • 71% of salon tanners are girls ages 16 to 29.
    • And let’s connect the dots: The American Academy of Dermatology lists melanoma as the second most common cancer in women 20 to 29 years old.

    Now here is the scariest stat of all according to Peter Boyle, MD, Director of IARC (International Agency for Research on Cancer):

    the link between youthful sunbed tanning and melanoma was “prominent and consistent” – a 75 percent increase in risk of melanoma among those who first used sunbeds in their twenties or teen years.”tanning-bed

    Though rates of squamous cell or basal cell carcinomas are not quite as significant, possibly because of limited data, we’re nonetheless talking a 75% increase in risk in the deadliest form of skin cancer.

    Our National Institute of Health was far ahead of the IARC, part of the World Health Organization, in determining sunlamps and sunbeds to be known carcinogens. In 2002 they specifically included UVA, UVB and UVC as “anticipated to be human carcinogens.” Yet, it is always good to have further awareness and validation on a global scale. This year IARC’s conclusions, listed in an excellent update on the FDA site, have led them to also move tanning beds from “probably carcinogenic to humans” into the highest cancer risk category: “carcinogenic to humans.”

    This has helped pave the way for banning indoor tanning by teens. As a matter of fact, our hat is ON (a little skin cancer prevention humor) to the people of MD who have listened to their MDs. On November 12th, 2009, Howard County, MD became the FIRST IN THE NATION to ban those under 18 from using indoor tanning devices!

    Remember, all exposure to UV radiation-whether from the sun, or from artificial sources such as sunlamps used in tanning beds, increases the risk of developing skin cancer, according to the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The Skin Cancer Foundation says that:

    “One blistering sunburn in childhood more than doubles a person’s chances of developing the deadliest form of skin cancer later in life.”

    Do you think we should ban access to tanning salons by those under 18? The statistics are continuing to pour in, but many salons still don’t abide by rules or recommendations of limiting visits for their customers by either age or frequency.

    So, just say no. And monitor your kids’ skin tone!

    Share

    Facts Don’t Lie on These Beds

    Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

    We think of summer fun and we’re reminded to think of safe sun exposure.  But what about when winter comes?  Too many of us — either in pursuit of SAD relief via a warm-weather getaway, or misguided goals of maintaining a tan — don’t stay conscious of skin protection year round. And skin cancers are increasing, especially among young women.

    As we noted in a previous post about tanning bed bans for teens in England, there is real danger from even “artificial sun”…and with more research findings exposed recently, it’s even worse than we thought.

    Let’s face facts:

    • Nearly 30 million people tan indoors in the US, every year. And more than one-third are teens.
    • 71% of salon tanners are girls ages 16 to 29.
    • And let’s connect the dots: The American Academy of Dermatology lists melanoma as the second most common cancer in women 20 to 29 years old.

    Now here is the scariest stat of all according to Peter Boyle, MD, Director of IARC (International Agency for Research on Cancer):

    the link between youthful sunbed tanning and melanoma was “prominent and consistent” – a 75 percent increase in risk of melanoma among those who first used sunbeds in their twenties or teen years.”tanning-bed

    Though rates of squamous cell or basal cell carcinomas are not quite as significant, possibly because of limited data, we’re nonetheless talking a 75% increase in risk in the deadliest form of skin cancer.

    Our National Institute of Health was far ahead of the IARC, part of the World Health Organization, in determining sunlamps and sunbeds to be known carcinogens.  In 2002 they specifically included UVA, UVB and UVC as “anticipated to be human carcinogens.”  Yet, it is always good to have further awareness and validation on a global scale. This year IARC’s conclusions, listed in an excellent update on the FDA site, have led them to also move tanning beds from “probably carcinogenic to humans” into the highest cancer risk category: “carcinogenic to humans.”

    This has helped pave the way for banning indoor tanning by teens.  As a matter of fact, our hat is ON (a little skin cancer prevention humor) to the people of MD who have listened to their MDs.  On November 12th, 2009, Howard County, MD became the FIRST IN THE NATION to ban those under 18 from using indoor tanning devices!

    Remember, all exposure to UV radiation-whether from the sun, or from artificial sources such as sunlamps used in tanning beds, increases the risk of developing skin cancer, according to the National Cancer Institute (NCI).  The Skin Cancer Foundation says that:

    “One blistering sunburn in childhood more than doubles a person’s chances of developing the deadliest form of skin cancer later in life.”

    Do you think we should ban access to tanning salons by those under 18?  The statistics are continuing to pour in, but many salons still don’t abide by rules or recommendations of limiting visits for their customers by either age or frequency.

    So, just say no.  And monitor your kids’ skin tone!

    Share