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Darker-complexioned teens will
always seek a tanning bed or booth. Because they
want a perfect and perpetual tan.
Younger, healthier, sexier,
thinner.
Many teenagers are either obsessed
with tanning or addicted to a darker-complexion.
According to psychologists, a cosmetic ideal obsession
or an emotional addiction might be the cause.
“Younger, healthier, sexier, thinner” - is the
message a bronzed complexion is sure to send out.
The medical community is trying to confront this
trend by educating teenagers that too often and
too intense tanning can be risky. It's nothing
wrong to be tanned, on the condition of:
- gradual and moderate indoor
tanning session,
- using without exception proper
sunscreen indoor or sunscreen/sunblock outdoors,
- avoiding childhood sunburns.
Thus, skin cancer risks are
avoided. Are kids complying to medical warnings?
According to Associated Press, only a third of
10,079 preteens and adolescents surveyed in 2002
said they had regularly used sunscreen during
the former summer. About 10 percent admitted that
they had used a tanning bed. And there is more.
Most of those surveyed said they have suffered
at least one sunburn during the previous summer.
Another significant study comes
from Boston University. Researchers questioned
about 10,000 children of nurses across the United
States participating in the Nurse's Health Study.
The study started up in the late 1980s. The conclusions
weren't so positive. Only 34 percent of the teenagers
- aged 12 to 18 -, reported using sunscreen regularly,
and 83 percent had suffered at least one sunburn.
36 percent of surveyers had endured three or even
more sunburns during the previous summer. Teenagers
were familiar to tanning beds: 14 percent of the
girls surveyed had used a tanning bed, rising
to 35 percent among 17 year old girls.
Representatives of American
Academy of Dermatology are puzzled since indoor
tanning is so unnecessary. It's not associated
with playing sports or other outdoor activities.
It is practiced exclusively for cosmetic reasons.
So young, so careless.
Modern indoor salons gave up
here and there traditional tanning beds and began
to offer safer alternatives such as spray-on tanning
or tanning booth which do not include UV light.
Despite these better choices, youth would rather
go to tanning beds using UV radiation because
it is cheaper. They got there wrongly believing
that tanning beds are safer than real sun exposure.
They seem careless even if they are aware that
UV rays delivered indoor are as dangerous as those
outdoor.
It's obvious that relatively
few teenagers are aware that sunburns increase
their risk of skin cancer. Yet they continue to
use tanning beds regularly. What happens during
childhood is crucial; an early sunburn history
is the foundation of potential further cancer.
Nationalwide warning campaigns in the United States
didn't show too many improvements in teens' attitude.
But things have to be changed drastically, since
melanoma is rising to critical range. In the past
years, at least 13 states have begun to regulate
teen tanning (bed or booth exposing) by:
- requiring parental presence
- asking written parental agreement
for teenagers under 18.
The state of California asks
for a doctor's prescription; otherwise, indoor
tanning sessions are forbidden for kids under
18. Moreover, a bill in Maryland requires all
three: parental presence, written consent of parents
and medical approval ! The sooner teens learn
to protect their skin, the better. Skin cancer
is mostly incurable.
About The Author:
Dana Scripca writes for http://www.sunlesstanning.ws
where you can find more information about Sunless
Tanning.
Please feel free to use this article in your Newsletter
or on your website. If you use this article, please
include the resource box and send a brief message
to let me know where it appeared:
danascri@gmail.com
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