Literature DB >> 26593781

Rationale, design, samples, and baseline sun protection in a randomized trial on a skin cancer prevention intervention in resort environments.

David B Buller1, Peter A Andersen2, Barbara J Walkosz3, Michael D Scott4, Larry Beck5, Gary R Cutter6.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Exposure to solar ultraviolet radiation during recreation is a risk factor for skin cancer. A trial evaluated an intervention to promote advanced sun protection (sunscreen pre-application/reapplication; protective hats and clothing; use of shade) during vacations.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Adult visitors to hotels/resorts with outdoor recreation (i.e., vacationers) participated in a group-randomized pretest-posttest controlled quasi-experimental design in 2012-14. Hotels/resorts were pair-matched and randomly assigned to the intervention or untreated control group. Sun. protection (e.g., clothing, hats, shade and sunscreen) was measured in cross-sectional samples by observation and a face-to-face intercept survey during two-day visits.
RESULTS: Initially, 41 hotel/resorts (11%) participated but 4 dropped out before posttest. Hotel/resorts were diverse (employees=30 to 900; latitude=24° 78' N to 50° 52' N; elevation=2ft. to 9726ft. above sea level), and had a variety of outdoor venues (beaches/pools, court/lawn games, golf courses, common areas, and chairlifts). At pretest, 4347 vacationers were observed and 3531 surveyed. More females were surveyed (61%) than observed (50%). Vacationers were mostly 35-60years old, highly educated (college education=68%) and non-Hispanic white (93%), with high-risk skin types (22%). Vacationers reported covering 60% of their skin with clothing. Also, 40% of vacationers used shade; 60% applied sunscreen; and 42% had been sunburned.
CONCLUSIONS: The trial faced challenges recruiting resorts but result showed that the large, multi-state sample of vacationers were at high risk for solar UV exposure.
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Clothing; Intervention; Prevention; Recreation; Skin cancer; Sunscreen

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26593781      PMCID: PMC4714565          DOI: 10.1016/j.cct.2015.11.015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Contemp Clin Trials        ISSN: 1551-7144            Impact factor:   2.226


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  6 in total

1.  Effect of an intervention on observed sun protection by vacationers in a randomized controlled trial at North American resorts.

Authors:  David B Buller; Peter A Andersen; Barbara J Walkosz; Michael D Scott; Larry Beck; Gary R Cutter
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2.  Prevalence of Sun Protection at Outdoor Recreation and Leisure Venues at Resorts in North America.

Authors:  Barbara J Walkosz; Michael D Scott; David B Buller; Peter A Andersen; Larry Beck; Gary R Cutter
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