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Teens' Indoor Tanning May Be Linked to Unhealthy Dieting: MedlinePlus

Teens' Indoor Tanning May Be Linked to Unhealthy Dieting: MedlinePlus

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From the National Institutes of HealthNational Institutes of Health






Teens' Indoor Tanning May Be Linked to Unhealthy Dieting

Poor body image behind both behaviors, expert says
By Robert Preidt
Friday, April 11, 2014
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FRIDAY, April 11, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- Teens who use indoor tanning may also try to control their weight through unhealthy methods, such as taking diet pills and vomiting, researchers say.
This link is stronger in boys than in girls, according to the study, published in the April issue of the Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics.
"Poor body image is associated with both indoor tanning behavior and eating disorder behaviors," David Schwebel, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, wrote in an accompanying editorial.
The findings show that in addition to increasing the risk of deadly melanoma skin cancer, indoor tanning might help identify teens at increased risk for eating disorders, said researchers Stephen Amrock and Dr. Michael Weitzman of the New York University School of Medicine.
Doctors should screen teens for indoor tanning use, they said. However, the research doesn't prove that one of these behaviors leads to the other.
The investigators analyzed survey data from nearly 27,000 high school students across the United States. They found that 23 percent of girls and 6.5 percent of boys had used indoor tanning within the past year. Indoor tanning was most common among older students -- one-third of females and 11 percent of males aged 18 or older.
Teens who used indoor tanning were more likely than others to say that they'd used unhealthy weight-control methods within the past month. These methods included fasting for more than 24 hours; taking weight-loss pills, powders or liquids; taking laxatives; or intentional vomiting.
Compared with girls who didn't use indoor tanning, girls who tanned indoors were 20 percent more likely to fast, 40 percent more likely to take laxatives or to vomit after eating, and more than twice as likely to take weight-loss products, the study found.
And compared with boys who didn't tan indoors, boys who used indoor tanning were more than twice as likely to fast, four times more likely to use weight-loss products, and seven times more likely to take laxatives or to vomit, the researchers said.
While having parents and doctors talk to teens about the risks of indoor tanning can be helpful, it's vital that more communities and states ban teens from tanning salons, Schwebel said.
SOURCE: Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics, news release, April 4, 2014
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