The connection between tanning beds and skin cancer is well documented, but evidently not strong enough to drive Americans from their pursuit of bronzed skin.
A new survey published in the journal Archives of Dermatology finds that 18.1 percent of women and 6.3 percent of men in the U.S. pay regular visits to tanning salons, risks be damned.
In fact, researchers found that most of the regular tanners were largely ignorant of the increased likelihood of melanoma and other ailments. Only 13.3 percent of the women and 4.2 percent of the men in the survey said they were aware that avoiding tanning beds could lower their risk of skin cancer. Interestingly, the study found that more educated women were more likely to use tanning beds.
The study, which surveyed close to 3,000 respondents, was carried out by doctors from the University of Minnesota.
In March, a Food and Drug Administration advisory panel recommended further restrictions on the use of tanning salons, including age restrictions and a higher classification of the danger level associated with tanning lamps.
The Melanoma Research Foundation says that the use of tanning beds before the age of 30 increases the probability of developing skin cancer by 75 percent.
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