When Heidi Tarr was a teenager, she used a tanning bed several times a week with her friends because they all wanted to glow like a celebrity. "It was just the thing to do—everyone wanted that nice, ...
Women's Health may earn commission from the links on this page, but we only feature products we believe in. Why Trust Us? Despite skin cancer and wrinkle warnings, plenty of people still use tanning ...
Step away from the tanning bed. Despite the numerous health risks — from premature aging to the obvious concern of skin cancer — indoor tanning devices are back in style thanks to Gen Z. But the ...
Research reveals that artificial sources of ultraviolet radiation cause cellular mutations that can be the seeds of future cancers, including highly deadly melanoma. Tanning bed users are known to ...
Tanning beds first hit the US market in the 1970s, and by the mid-2010s, had grown into a US$3-billion-a-year industry. As of 2013, an estimated 7.8 million women and 1.9 million men in the US hit the ...
The precise biological process behind the increased risk of melanoma previously remained unclear, and the study found the use of indoor tanning beds led to a nearly threefold increase in melanoma risk ...
Using a tanning bed to get that perfect glow is far riskier than we may think, according to findings by Northwestern Medicine and the University of California, San Francisco published Dec. 12 in the ...
Tanning is associated with the summer season, when bright, scorching sunlight dulls the skin. But that does not mean you can let your guard down in winter just because the sunlight feels milder.
Researchers discovered that tanning beds cause widespread, mutation-laden DNA damage across almost all skin, explaining the sharply increased melanoma risk. Single-cell genomic analysis revealed ...
A 20-year-old transient man accused of attacking a tanning salon employee and a customer last Tuesday in Loveland struck the employee more than 15 times on the top of her head with a hammer, according ...