HealthyWomen.org
Call Us: 1-877-986-9472 (toll-free)
      Spell Checker
Publications & Resources Sign up for Free e-Newsletters
Health Topics A-Z
 
Table of Contents
 
 
Publications & ResourcesText size: A A A November 20, 2008

Women's Health in the News

Hispanic Teens Take More Skin Cancer Risks
Monday, August 20, 2007

HealthDay News

Many think they're in no real danger, survey finds

MONDAY, Aug. 20 (HealthDay News) -- Hispanic-American teens are more likely than their white peers to take risks that boost their odds for skin cancer, a new survey finds.

Reporting in the August issue of the journal Archives of Dermatology, a team at the University of Miami's Miller School of Medicine surveyed 369 high school students (221 white Hispanics and 148 white non-Hispanics).

They found that Hispanic teens were more likely to use tanning beds, less likely to consider themselves at risk for skin cancer, and less likely to protect themselves from the sun.

Compared to white non-Hispanics, white Hispanics were:

  • More likely to tan deeply (44.2 percent vs. 31 percent).
  • About 1.8 times more likely to never or rarely use sun-protective clothing.
  • About twice as likely to never or rarely use sunscreen.
  • 2.5 times more likely to have used a tanning bed in the previous year.
  • 60 percent less likely to have heard of skin self-examination and 70 percent less likely to have been told how to do it.
  • Less likely to think they had an average or above-average risk for skin cancer (23.1 percent vs. 39.9 percent).

There's a real need to improve participation of white Hispanic students in skin cancer prevention programs, the authors concluded.

Exposure to the sun's ultraviolet (UV) rays is a major risk factor for skin cancers, and a person's majority of lifetime UV exposure occurs by age 18, the Miami team noted. White Hispanics have a lower rate of skin cancer than white non-Hispanics, but white Hispanics are more likely to be diagnosed with more advanced skin cancer.

SOURCE: JAMA/Archives journals, news release, Aug. 20, 2007

Copyright © 2006 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.

 
  Email this Page Email this Page
Sign up for Free E-Newsletters Print this Page Print this Page
ORDER PUBLICATIONS |  FREE E-NEWSLETTERS |  RSS FEEDS |  SITE MAP |  CONTACT US
National Women's Health Resource Center   157 Broad Street, Suite 106   Red Bank, NJ 07701   1-877-986-9472 (toll-free)