Indoor tanning is a beauty staple for many Americans, with 35 percent of Americans having visited a tanning salon at least once in their lifetimes. The tanning bed market is expected to grow steadily ...
Indoor tanning may explain why U.S. melanoma rates are rising faster for women than for men, according to new research. In a study of people under age 50 with melanoma - the deadliest skin cancer - ...
Indoor tanning addiction is real and it has a clear target demographic: young white women with a history of depression. A new study from Georgetown University found that indoor tanning addiction is ...
The stereotypical indoor tanner is a young woman, but men tan, too. And while men may use tanning beds less often than women, new research has found they do it in riskier ways. Warnings about the ...
The dangers of indoor and outdoor tanning have been hammered home over and over again by health experts, but that hasn’t made a difference to a large percentage of girls and young women who continue ...
Indoor tanning is a great way to get skin cancer – especially if you start young. People who use tanning beds, sunlamps or tanning booths before age 35 are up to 75% more likely to develop melanoma, ...
Women under 40 who started indoor tanning at a younger age and tanned more often have a higher risk of being diagnosed with melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer, a new study shows. University ...
About a quarter of non-Hispanic white women, including both high school students and young adults, use indoor tanning methods, according to results from a new study. This risky practice may come with ...
The study found the women recognize that their tanning behavior puts them at risk for skin cancer, but they believe the perceived benefits of tanning outweigh those risks. More than one-fifth of young ...
Young women who use tanning beds or booths have up to a sixfold increase in their likelihood of developing melanoma, a new study found. The study also suggests that indoor tanning has likely played a ...
Despite the risks, few adults said indoor tanning increases risk of skin cancer. Dec. 21, 2010— -- Dr. Cheryl Karcher hates to admit it, but when she was a teen, she too wanted the bronze ...