Dying to be tanned

BF0157-001Our summer here in Ireland which started off promisingly in early June, has fizzled out to the usual damp and wet Irish summer we have become all too familiar with. Being tanned used to be a big priority for  me back in my teenage years and on into my twenties, but my priorities have changed since then, and I miss the blue skies and warmth of a sunny day, not the tan. I resorted to tanning salons back in the day in pursuit of that “healthy” glow, but there was little or no talk of the dangers of sunbeds then. In fact, it was marketed as a safer way to get a tan! The logic was that you started on the beds before you went on your sun holiday to build up a base and then you wouldn’t burn so easily! When I think back to how recklessly I used those tanning salons, knowing what I know now, I really cannot fathom why I believed having a tan was so important. But then, when you are young, you don’t believe that you will get ill, you will age, or you will die, and it seems that despite all the cancer warnings, the pursuit of that tan is still all important to younger girls today.

A recent report has claimed categorically that sunbeds pose a similar cancer risk as cigarettes and asbestos. The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) had previously classified sunbeds as being a “probable” cause of cancer.

However, the agency is now recommending that tanning machines should be moved to “the highest cancer risk category” and be labeled as “carcinogenic to humans”.

It followed a review of research that concluded that the risk of melanoma — the most deadly form of skin cancer — was increased by 75 percent in people who started using sunbeds regularly before the age of 30.

The IARC also says there is evidence of a link between melanoma of the eye and the use of sunbeds. In an article in medical journal The Lancet, WHO oncology expert Dr. Fatiha El Ghissassi wrote: “The use of UV-emitting tanning devices is widespread in many developed countries, especially among young women.

“Analysis concluded that the risk of skin melanoma is increased by 75 percent when use of tanning devices starts before 30 years of age.

“Studies provide consistent evidence of a positive association between the use of UV-emitting tanning devices and ocular melanoma.

“Therefore, the Working Group raised the classification of the use of UV emitting tanning devices to Group 1, ‘carcinogenic to humans.'”

For more on this study click here

Source: CNN