Cosmopolitan USA – June 2017

(Tina Meador) #1

106


BODY


“My sun worshipping


caught up with me.


i’ve been vigilant about skin care since I
started med school at 25. But before that,
I sinned in pretty much every sun-related
way. In my teens, I used baby oil and
had tanning contests with friends—we all
wanted that golden glow. I was also an
outdoor athlete and wilderness survival
guide who didn’t wear SPF.
I was still shocked to learn, in 2007, that
I had a basal cell carcinoma, a cancerous
lesion on the surface of my skin. I’d noticed
a small pink bump on the tip of my nose—at
first, I assumed it was a pimple—and asked
one of my residents to biopsy it.
The good news is that the vast majority
of basal cell cancers can be cured with sur-
gical removal. Mine was no different,
even when it happened again with a spot
under my eye two years later.
But I still wasn’t in the clear. That same
year, I found what looked like a dirt spot on
my knee that wouldn’t smudge off. It was
a pre-melanoma—much more serious than
my previous two scares. Luckily, I caught
it early, before it could spread, and now all
that’s left is a tiny scar.
When my patients say, “I already did so
much damage in my teens—why stop tan-
ning now?” I tell them that there’s still time
to protect themselves. The immune system
is always working to find and destroy UV-
damaged cells. Each time you expose your-
self anew, you weaken your body’s ability to
keep those cells from mutating into cancer.

—ELLEN MARMUR, MD
dermatologist and founder of Marmur Medical,
in New York City

The science is clear: Tanning beds
cause cancer. The World Health
Organization classifies them as a
carcinogen, alongside cigarettes and
asbestos. Baking yourself even once
increases your lifetime risk of
melanoma by 20 percent, according
to a meta-analysis in the journal

BMJ. Plus, it may soon be against
the law: At press time, 15 states,
the District of Columbia, and several
cities and counties have made it
illegal for anyone under 18 to use a
tanning bed. The FDA has also
proposed sweeping federal
restrictions. If you’re desperate for

sun-kissed skin, stick with self-
tanners. You’ll look younger and
live longer. Need more incentive
than that? You could save money by
avoiding biopsies and cancer
treatment. “Every time you don’t use
a tanning bed,” says Dr. Marmur,
“think of it as paying yourself $500.”

STAY


OUT OF


BEDS


HEADS UP: A
BIG HAT AT THE
BEACH CAN BE
LIFESAVING.
Free download pdf