Literature DB >> 27556919

Health behaviours associated with indoor tanning based on the 2012/13 Manitoba Youth Health Survey.

E Harland1, J Griffith2, H Lu1, T Erickson1, K Magsino1.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Although indoor tanning causes cancer, it remains relatively common among adolescents. Little is known about indoor tanning prevalence and habits in Canada, and even less about associated behaviours. This study explores the prevalence of adolescent indoor tanning in Manitoba and its association with other demographic characteristics and health behaviours.
METHODS: We conducted secondary analyses of the 2012/13 Manitoba Youth Health Survey data collected from Grade 7 to 12 students (n = 64 174) and examined associations between indoor tanning (whether participants had ever used artificial tanning equipment) and 25 variables. Variables with statistically significant associations to indoor tanning were tested for collinearity and grouped based on strong associations. For each group of highly associated variables, the variable with the greatest effect upon indoor tanning was placed into the final logistic regression model. Separate analyses were conducted for males and females to better understand sex-based differences, and analyses were adjusted for age.
RESULTS: Overall, 4% of male and 9% of female students reported indoor tanning, and prevalence increased with age. Relationships between indoor tanning and other variables were similar for male and female students. Binary logistic regression models indicated that several variables significantly predicted indoor tanning, including having part-time work, being physically active, engaging in various risk behaviours such as driving after drinking for males and unplanned sex after alcohol/drugs for females, experiencing someone say something bad about one's body shape/size/appearance, identifying as trans or with another gender, consuming creatine/other supplements and, for females only, never/rarely using sun protection.
CONCLUSION: Indoor tanning among adolescents was associated with age, part-time work, physical activity and many consumption behaviours and lifestyle risk factors. Though legislation prohibiting adolescent indoor tanning is critical, health promotion to discourage indoor tanning may be most beneficial if it also addresses these associated factors.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Canada; UV exposure; adolescents; indoor tanning; risk factors; skin cancer; students; youth

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27556919      PMCID: PMC5215182          DOI: 10.24095/hpcdp.36.8.02

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Promot Chronic Dis Prev Can        ISSN: 2368-738X            Impact factor:   3.240


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6.  Adolescents' use of indoor tanning: a large-scale evaluation of psychosocial, environmental, and policy-level correlates.

Authors:  Joni A Mayer; Susan I Woodruff; Donald J Slymen; James F Sallis; Jean L Forster; Elizabeth J Clapp; Katherine D Hoerster; Latrice C Pichon; John R Weeks; George E Belch; Martin A Weinstock; Todd Gilmer
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Review 10.  Indoor tanning and non-melanoma skin cancer: systematic review and meta-analysis.

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  2 in total

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2.  The relationship between indoor tanning and body mass index, physical activity, or dietary practices: a systematic review.

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  2 in total

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