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    Date Issued2017 (1)2016 (1)2015 (1)Author
    Blashill, Aaron J. (3)
    Pagoto, Sherry L. (3)Antognini, Tad (1)Hayes, Rashelle B. (1)Olendzki, Effie (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationUMass Worcester Prevention Research Center (3)Department of Medicine, Division of Prevention and Behavioral Medicine (1)Department of Medicine, Division of Preventive and Behavioral Medicine (1)Division of Prevention and Behavioral Medicine, Department of Medicine (1)Document TypeEditorial (1)Journal Article (1)Letter to the Editor (1)KeywordCommunity Health and Preventive Medicine (2)Dermatology (2)indoor tanning (2)Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms (1)bisexual men (1)View MoreJournalJAMA dermatology (2)American journal of public health (1)

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    Effect of Legislation on Indoor Tanning Prevalence in Alabama

    Blashill, Aaron J.; Pagoto, Sherry L. (2017-06-01)
    OBJECTIVES: To examine changes in indoor tanning prevalence among Alabama high school students the year before and after its 2014 legal restrictions compared with Florida, which had more lenient legislation. METHODS: We analyzed the Alabama and Florida 2015 Youth Risk Behavior Survey (n = 14 389; population = 1 864 241) by gender, age, year (2013, 2015), state (Alabama, Florida), and year-by-state interactions. RESULTS: Prevalence of indoor tanning was higher among Alabama youths, but the difference did not significantly change after the law was passed in Alabama (between-state change differences ranged from a 3.3% increase among 14-year-old Alabama girls to a 9.7% decrease among 14-year-old Alabama boys). CONCLUSIONS: We found no significant changes in indoor tanning among adolescents since the enactment of Alabama's tanning restrictions in 2014. More oversight and monitoring are needed to ensure that indoor tanning facilities are compliant with emerging laws.
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    The Association Between Psychiatric Disorders and Frequent Indoor Tanning

    Blashill, Aaron J.; Oleski, Jessica L.; Hayes, Rashelle B.; Scully, Jonathan M.; Antognini, Tad; Olendzki, Effie; Pagoto, Sherry L. (2016-05-01)
    Limited research has explored psychiatric disorders associated with indoor tanning and tanning dependence. In a study conducted in 2006 of students at a large university in the northeastern United States, 90 of 229 (39%) who had used indoor tanning facilities met criteria for tanning dependence,a tanning pattern highly resistant to intervention. Given that tanners report mood and physical appearance as reasons for tanning, psychological disorders, such as seasonal affective disorder (SAD) and body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), may be common among this population. Past research found that 12 of 27 (44%) frequent indoor tanners met criteria for SAD compared with 14 of 56 (25%) nontanners. Other studies have found that stress in general is predictive of tanning dependence,and tanners have been shown to report lower levels of stress after tanning. Ashrafioun and Bonarreported that 57 of 165 (35%) tanners who met criteria for tanning dependence also met criteria for BDD, compared with 77 of 368 (21%) tanners who did not meet these criteria. In the study described here, we assessed the prevalence of SAD, clinically elevated stress, and BDD among a sample of women who frequently use indoor tanning, and we examined bivariate associations between tanning dependence and these psychological conditions.
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    Skin Cancer Risk in Gay and Bisexual Men: A Call to Action

    Blashill, Aaron J.; Pagoto, Sherry L. (2015-12-01)
    Editorial recommending that the significant sexual orientation health disparities among gay and bisexual men in regard to skin cancer and use of indoor tanning must be studied.
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