...Herkirat Nirwal December 19th, 2016 Should Indoor Tanning Beds Be Banned? Indoor tanning has become a very popular and easy way to tan over the past few years. Over 25,000 Americans ages 18 and above have tanned using a bed in the year of 2010. Tanning beds are a machine that is used for body tanning. Tanning is a method that is used to make skin a different tone. Many people around the world today use tanning beds and most people probably aren’t aware of the facts behind it. These machines can be very harmful to one’s body and can lead to illnesses and diseases such as cancer. In my opinion, tanning beds should be banned because they lead to disease, effects on vision, and ¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬can cause addiction. Research states that using tanning...
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...average of 300 dollars per year to tan in indoor tanning beds. This equates to a total U.S. market for tanning of over 9 billion dollars per year, not including the 3 billion dollar tanning products market (Karim, 2007). What some Americans seem to be obsessed with regarding obtaining the perfect skin color is actually unhealthy and potentially dangerous. Indoor tanning causes many skin problems that may worsen over time. It is an unhealthy habit that many people of various ages have. Artificial tanning poses a risk because it causes significant damage to one’s health. Although tanning can be dangerous scientists have discovered that limiting indoor tanning to 20 half hour sessions per year will keep the risks within an acceptable limit. It has been indicated that children under 16 should not expose themselves to tanning beds. Even though there are safe ways to tan indoors, evidence is accumulating that the use of tanning beds may have adverse effects on the skin. There are two types of UV rays: ultraviolet A rays and ultraviolet B rays. The risks of UVB rays are well established, however the UVA rays used in tanning beds may cause a variety of skin problems as well...
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...Composition I 8 April 2016 Research Paper: Indoor Tanning Bed For the past twenty years, it has become very apparent that indoor tanning beds damages skin. Based on scientific research tanning can also lead to blinding eye diseases and have many other negative effects. The prolonged use of indoor tanning facilities has resulted in serious chronic conditions for the users. “The indoor tanning business has been one of the fastest growing industries in the United States, with $5 billion in estimated annual revenue (Woo, Eide par. 3).” When driving through any community or city you will almost always see a sign or window, maybe even more than one, which says “Tanning” thus making it very accessible for many women or men of any age. The reason behind this growth? Around twenty to forty percent of white females 18 years old to 25 use indoor tanning facilities (Rabbitt p. 2). Many high schoolers have picked up on this wave of increase by tanning for things such as prom, summer and even just to fit in with the social norms. “One fifth of girls in grades 9 through 12 have bathed in ultraviolet rays from a tanning device within the past year…(Ban the Tan par. 2).” Reports show that many women say tanning is addicting because of the “desire to achieve an attractive look and trim, and for warmth, light, and relaxation (Woo, Eide p. 63).” Also ladies believe that tanning beds will you give you the vitamin C needed for the day, while tanning will provide some vitamin C levels, it doesn’t...
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...Tanning is a popular activity for people longing a certain complexion. While outdoor tanning is more traditional, indoor tanning has become increasingly usual. Disputed by individual preference on which is best to whom, tanning is very dangerous. Both indoor and outdoor tanning can cause damage to your skin. Indoor tanning emits more ultraviolet A rays, while outdoor tanning causes sunburns. Tanning is a browning or darkening of the skin, as by exposure to the sun. (D, 2004) While tanning, the sun transmits ultraviolet rays into the skin, ultraviolet A and ultraviolet B. Ultraviolet A rays are more common than ultraviolet B rays during these transmissions. Ultraviolet A rays permeate deep into skin layers, while producing a tan. (Woo & Eide, 2010, p.61-71) The penetration of these rays cause permanent skin damage. (Hurevich & Gilon, 2007) Ultraviolet B rays causes sunburns, early skin aging, aids the body in forming vitamin D, and can cause skin cancer. (Hurevich & Gilon, 2007) The sun diffuses ultraviolet rays A and B. During tanning, dangerous...
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...Skin Cancer On The Rise Josephine Mancini Kaplan University Skin Cancer Has No Mercy Skin cancer is a disease that is not taken seriously. Skin cancer is when the skin cells grow abnormally. Skin cancer in the United States is the most common type of cancer. Every year, more than 68,000 Americans are diagnosed with melanoma, and another 48,000 are diagnosed with an early form of skin cancer.(National Cancer Institute 2011). Does increased exposure to UV light increase risk of skin cancer? Sunlight is the main source of ultraviolet (UV) radiation, which can damage the genes in your skin cells (American Cancer Society 2009). UV light is thought to be the major risk factor for most skin cancers. You don’t just get UV light from the sun you also get UV light from tanning lamps and booths. People exposed to high levels UV light are at a greater risk for skin cancer. Nearly 30 million people use tanning bed in the US every year, 71 percent are young ladies between the ages 16-29.(Skin Cancer Foundation 2012). Different Types of Skin Caner There are three types of skin cancer basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and melanoma. Basal cell carcinoma is a type of skin cancer that begins in the basal cell area of our skin. Basal cell carcinoma appears on skin that has been exposed to the sun. This type of skin cancer is the least deadly but if it goes undetected for years it can be deadly. Another type of skin cancer is squamous cell carcinoma that may occur in...
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...Tanning Beds or Death Beds? Since tanning beds became a sensational hit in the 1990s, their use has evolved in various ways. The idea of getting into a metal bed to change the complexion of your skin seems harmless. It’s cheap, relaxing, and it saves you the hustle of going out in the sun. But after all these years, the question comes into mind; are tanning beds truly harmless? To answer this question, we have to go back in time, back to the 1900s when people were struggling to find a way to combat vitamin D deficiencies. This paved the way for the indoor tanning industry, which was started in 1906 by Heraeus, a German innovative medical company. Heraeus created UV tanning lamps that were beneficial especially to those with bone diseases such as Rickets, which is caused by a vitamin D deficiency. But what made the tanning bed business boom was when French celebrities like Coco Chanel and Josephine Baker displayed natural looking sun-kissed skin. However, what if a person wanted their body to evenly receive vitamin D and have sun-kissed skin all at the same time? This is where Friedrich Wolff, a German scientist, in 1978, decided to take this artificial sun one step further. Wolff was experimenting...
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...xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx English 101 25 March 2011 Student/Teacher Memo 1. What was your purpose? What effect were you trying to achieve? My purpose was to write about tanning as a cause of the skin cancer, and about skin cancer as a consequence of tanning. 2. What was interesting about the process you went through in writing this paper, and what did you learn from it? It was very interesting to research about skin cancer, as I am particularly interested on the subject. I also did not know tanning or any ultraviolet radiation exposure can have such serious consequences. 3. What was the most difficult aspect about this paper, and what did you learn from the attempt? It was difficult to give it a clear structure on cause/effect, although the subject clearly illustrates this structure. 4. What do you see as the strengths of the paper, and what would you try to do if you were to revise it some more? The strength of the paper is the very reliable sources. 5. What’s not a part of your paper that you think might help a reader understand or appreciate it more? What didn’t you put in? I did not further develop on skin cancer, how it presents and develops. 6. What kind of grammar or formatting feedback would you like from your instructor? I would appreciate full feedback on both. 7. When using the APUS Online Library article databases, did you evaluate the credibility of the sources you chose? Yes. 8. Are your memo and essay in correct MLA format? Yes. 9. Did you save...
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...would use plant extracts and oils that they thought would help protect their skin from the sun. It was considered of high class to have pale skin and therefore people of high stature would use white powder (arsenic salts) to help produce a whiter looking appearance. The modern development of sunscreen was produced by Eugene Schueller in 1935. He produced a sunscreen using benzyl salicylate as a UVR absorber. Schueller was the founder of a company known today to be L’Oreal and was great at advertising. After WWII he marketed a “tanned body” as a healthy body and used tanned women in bikinis to promote his product. In 1962 there were two major advances in sunscreen materials and sunscreen testing. First benzophenone was introduced as a ingredient and its purpose was to absorb UVA rays. In the tests mouse skin was significantly protected from the UVA rays using this material. In the matter of testing the effectiveness of sunscreen Wiskemann and Heissen introduced the use of a water-cooled xenon high-pressure arc for the skin testing. There is increasing evidence the UVA radiation can cause chronic skin damage in healthy people who are exposed to the sun. Therefore the search for a UVA absorbing agent has been the research of that is of greatest concern. The need for protection against sun damage of skin and eyes has existed since ancient times. Once again it is becoming fashionable to have “Pale skin” because this relates to having a long and healthy life. How is your...
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...races and genders are dying from skin cancer, although it is very preventable.There are many different precautions that can be taken to prevent skin cancer. Skin cancer is a problem today because it affects people’s daily lifestyle and in some cases is deadly. Skin cancer may be the most common malignancy in humans, but according to Dr. Mark Lebwhol, professor of dermatology at the Icahn School of Medicine, it is also one of the most preventable cancers (“Skin Cancer Prevention”). Because skin cancer continues to rise at an alarming rate, all Americans need to be more informed of how to prevent it. It is important for all people to know the many risk factors of skin cancer. Risk Factors...
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...Running head: CASE STUDY: SKIN CANCER 1 Case Study: Skin Cancer ITT Technical Institute Case Study: Skin Cancer 2 The skin is one of the largest organs in the body in surface area and weight. The skin consists of two layers: the epidermis and the dermis. Beneath the dermis lies the hypodermis or subcutaneous fatty tissue. The skin has three main functions: protection, regulation and sensation. The skin is an also an organ of protection, its primary function is to act as a barrier. An individual can get skin cancer one of the risk factors is sun exposure. Sun exposure is known as the major factor associated with all types of skin cancers. There are different types of skin cancer: basal cell carcinoma, known as BCC, squamous cell carcinoma, known as SCC and melanoma. Chronic sun exposure incurred by consistent, repetitive sun exposure, by individuals who work outside is a risk factor. Individuals who go on vacation and spend hours in the sun are at risk, due to their skin has not adapted to the sun, which would be called acute sun expose. Acute sun exposure, depending on the time spent in the sun and your skin type, can result in sunburn. Sunburn is an injury to your skin which can cause pain and/or blistering. Childhood sun exposure may also play an important part in the development of these cancers later in adult life, where children play outside for hours in the summer. (http://www.ccohs.ca) Family history has...
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...Outline Topic: Skin Cancer Thesis: Skin cancer is the most common type of cancer in the United States but is highly curable if detected early and treated properly. Specific Purpose: to inform the audience about the different kinds of skin cancer and what preventive measures you can take to protect yourself from skin cancer. I. Introduction A. Do you know that skin cancer is the most common type of cancer in the United States; two million people are diagnosed annually. B. Skin cancer is the uncontrolled growth of abnormal skin cells caused by UV radiation from the sun and tanning beds. C. 1 in five people will develop skin cancer in their lifetime. D. The risk for skin cancer is much higher for Caucasians than for people of African or Hispanic descent. E. It is also the most treatable form of cancer, if found and treated early. F. I was diagnosed with squamous cell keratocanthoma type skin cancer at the age of 35, quite a shock. G. Today, I will share with you the facts about skin cancer. II. Body A. Basal cell skin cancer are abnormal, uncontrolled growths or lesions that arise in the skin’s basal cells, which line the deepest layer of the epidermis (the outermost layer of the skin).Basal cell skin cancer is the most common form of common form of cancer in the United States and accounts for more than 90% of diagnosed skin cancer. Most skin cancers are basal cell cancer. 1. You are more likely to get basal cell skin cancer if you have: ...
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...Outline Topic: Skin Cancer Thesis: Skin cancer is the most common type of cancer in the United States but is highly curable if detected early and treated properly. Specific Purpose: to inform the audience about the different kinds of skin cancer and what preventive measures you can take to protect yourself from skin cancer. I. Introduction A. Do you know that skin cancer is the most common type of cancer in the United States; two million people are diagnosed annually. B. Skin cancer is the uncontrolled growth of abnormal skin cells caused by UV radiation from the sun and tanning beds. C. 1 in five people will develop skin cancer in their lifetime. D. The risk for skin cancer is much higher for Caucasians than for people of African or Hispanic descent. E. It is also the most treatable form of cancer, if found and treated early. F. I was diagnosed with squamous cell keratocanthoma type skin cancer at the age of 35, quite a shock. G. Today, I will share with you the facts about skin cancer. II. Body A. Basal cell skin cancer are abnormal, uncontrolled growths or lesions that arise in the skin’s basal cells, which line the deepest layer of the epidermis (the outermost layer of the skin).Basal cell skin cancer is the most common form of common form of cancer in the United States and accounts for more than 90% of diagnosed skin cancer. Most skin cancers are basal cell cancer. 1. You are more likely to get basal cell skin cancer if you have: ...
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...Sunbeds has got both men and women ‘dying’ for a tan. These indoor tanning machines have advantages as well as disadvantages, it’s ability to provide sufficient amounts of vitamin D can benefit so many people who are ‘indoors’, but many people often abuse the benefits of the sunbed and become addicted for the wrong reasons. Other than it’s efficiency to provide consumers with a long-lasting glorious tan, this extraordinary tanning invention leaves consumers feeling satisfied, attractive and most importantly, wanting more (Hutchison, 2010). Although sunbeds provide this great conviency, consumers must also realize that there are other ways to achieve that crisp goddess tan without sacrificing their health. Indoor tanning machines have been promoted in the past as a healthy alternative to frying out in the sun. While natural sunlight...
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...huge burden to people and greatly impacts their lives. Cancer being one of them is a group of diseases where cells divide and grow uncontrollably. The good news is that there are a number of lifestyle changes and therapy that can greatly reduce or even prevent cancer. Skin cancer is most definitely one that we may not notice right away. There are risk factors that we can control and other areas of the illness that we can’t. Cancer is a broad group of many different types. Cancer starts out with abnormal cells that are grouped together. A group of these cells is called a tumor. A tumor is then tested to see if it has the danger of spreading. If it does have the capability of spreading, then it is considered cancerous. It put the cancer cells and the cell growth ratio out of order where the cancer cells are taking over and get out of control. More specifically, Melanoma is when the cancer cells have taken over the skin. Often times we don't even notice it because it may appear to be a beauty mark or skin tag when in reality we have something more dangerous going on. The risk factors for melanoma are just like any other type of cancer. Some aspects of the disease are controllable while others are not. The Controllable factors are also known as manageable factors. The factors we cannot control are the color of our skin, the color of our hair, our genetics. The things we can control are sun exposure, the use of tanning beds, and lastly how frequently we get checked out by a dermatologist...
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...SKIN CANCER & TANNING The idea of a “healthy tan” is a myth which must be corrected in order to reduce the increasing incidence of skin cancer in the world. An individual's skin color is determined by their genes and their environment. Our skin can change color in reaction to sun exposure. This is called the "tanning response." When skin absorbs UV radiation, melanin is produced and transferred to the keratinocytes cells within the skin thereby darkening the color of the skin. Melanin in the skin absorbs and scatters UV radiation entering the body and helps protect the skin from adverse reactions to radiation. Thus, the "tanning response" is really a defensive reaction by the body to the presence of damaging radiation, and an effort by the body to protect itself from the harmful affect of ultraviolet A and ultraviolet B (UVA and UVB) rays (“Anatomy”). A tan still remains in the minds of many as socially desirable. Each day we are confronted with images on television and in magazines of golden-brown models and celebrities. In addition, we are the targets of local advertising and promotion of tanning salons. People must understand that a tan is not necessary; and that in addition to the premature aging of the skin, there are serious and possibly deadly consequences from the overexposure of one’s body to UVA and/or UVB rays. The deadly consequence is skin cancer. When people think of cancer they relate to the threat of colon cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer, prostate...
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