After the World Health Organization announced last year that it was definitively saying that the use of tanning beds significantly increases the likelihood of deadly skin cancers like melanoma, and the less dangerous but still attention-needing squamous and basal cell carcinomas, there has been increased scrutiny on the indoor tanning industry and the warnings that are displayed within them, warnings that they particularly want younger people to notice.
Why? Because in our teens it’s the cool thing to get a tan, but you’re not necessarily thinking that this can ruin your health, you’re more so thinking about how good you’re gonna look on the beach, and they want to get the point across to teens and people in their twenties that this is potentially life threatening, since there are more and more cases of early diagnosed melanomas.
You are hearing a lot of stories about girls in their twenties and teens being diagnosed with melanoma, which quite frankly should scare the hell out of regular tanners. The FDA is mulling ideas now to impose tougher restrictions on how they need to display warning signs. Right now, the warning signs are fairly evident, but they may require them to be larger, or to have stronger, more explicit wording that would be more likely to scare people off or to at least make sure they are not over using these beds to get tan.
Here’s the shock too, apparently a study was done that showed most people can get the same tan by going to a tanning salon just once a week that they get when they go three days a week, sparking further worries that people are unnecessarily overdoing it in these beds because they are addicted to them.
I for one, do believe that a little bit of UV light is actually healthy, since it produces vitamin D naturally, but you cross the line when you burn the skin or you expose yourself too much to sunlight. Experts say that even getting a light tan though is triggering the process that causes cancers to form, so even getting a tan is not supposedly safe.
You are especially at a higher risk for melanoma skin cancer if you burned a lot when you were younger, but tanning bed users risk increases by about 75% from the non-tanning population, so these statistics are quite convincing that UV exposure is bad for the skin. Stick to the self tanner, and you’ll be alright!
