Scientific American - USA (2022-06)

(Maropa) #1
62 Scientific American, June 2022

■ Swimming or spending time in water 33%
■ Working outside own/family/friend’s home 26%
■ Traveling or vacationing for leisure 21%
■ Engaging in nonswimming physical activity 14%
■ Attending an outdoor event 13%
■ Relaxing (e.g., reading, napping) 11%
■ Trying to get a tan 6%
■ Working at job 5%
■ Drinking alcohol 3%

Activities Adults
Were Engaged
in When They
Experienced
Their Most
Recent Sunburn

Locations on the
Body Where
the Most Recent
Sunburn
Occurred
(percent of more
than 3,000 survey
respondents that
ticked each box)

Skin Melanoma: Country-Level Mortality and Incidence Rates in 2020 (age-standardized)


New Zealand

Norway

Neck or shoulders
66%

Don’t know/
remember 3%

Chest or abdomen
15%

Legs or feet
19%

Back
24%
Arms or hands
40%

Face or head
53%

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
Incidence (per 100,000 people)

0

1

2

3

4

5

Mortality (per 100,000 people)

Africa

Latin America and
the Caribbean
North America

Asia
Europe

Oceania

Denmark Australia
Sweden The Netherlands

Slovenia

Ireland

Israel

U.S.

Germany

Slovakia
Serbia Croatia
Poland

Martinique France, New Caledonia

Montenegro

Samoa

French Polynesia

Canada

Austria
Namibia

Uruguay

Sources: GLOBOCAN 2020; Global Cancer Observatory; International Agency for Research on Cancer 2022 (

incidence and mortality rates

);^

“The Context of Sunburn among U.S. Adults: Common Activities and Sun Protection Behaviors,” by Dawn M. Holman et al., in

American Journal

of Preventive Medicine,

Vol. 60; May 2021 (

survey results

)

GRAPHIC SCIENCE
Text by Clara Moskowitz | Graphic by MSJONESNYC

The Where and When of Sunburns in the U.S.
A May 2021 study in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine analyzed a survey of more than 4,000 U.S. adults to find out what people were doing when they got
sunburned and where burns occurred. Although sunburns are a major risk factor for skin cancer, exposure that doesn’t lead to a burn can still be harmful, Jemal says.
“It’s important not to think you’re safe just because you’re not getting sunburned.”

Skin cancer is the most common form of cancer, and
because older people make up a greater share of the
population in many places, including the U.S., it is on
the rise. The main cause of skin cancer is exposure
to the sun’s ultraviolet rays, but the risk varies great-
ly across the globe because of differences in skin pig-
mentation—which protects against skin cancer—and
the amount of direct sunlight that regions receive.
“Skin melanoma is nearly 30 times higher in whites
than in Blacks,” says Ahmedin Jemal, a cancer epide-

miologist at the American Cancer Society. “And even
in white populations there is a difference in sus-
ceptibility—those with fairer skin, blue eyes
and blond hair are more susceptible.”
Yet there are reasons for optimism. New
treatments for skin cancer, including immu-
notherapy, have helped raise survival rates,
which are now around 93 percent after five
years for people diagnosed with melanoma
relative to the general population.

Skin Cancer around the World


This leading cancer affects some populations and regions much more than others


UV radiation is
about 40 percent stronger
in New Zealand than it is at
corresponding latitudes in the
Northern Hemisphere. Because of
Earth’s tilt, the Southern Hemi­
sphere is closer to the sun during
its summer than the north is
during its own summer.

Scandinavian
countries have high
rates of skin melanoma as
a result of their populations’
fair skin, as well as their
penchant for visiting
Mediterranean
countries.

One of the reasons
Namibians are more prone
to skin cancer than residents of
other African nations is that this
country has the highest rate of
albinism per capita in the world.
The condition, which causes a lack of
pigmentation in skin, hair and eyes,
is associated with higher
skin cancer risks.
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