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Tanning bed, tanning salon
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Teen tanning ban stalls over dueling data

Published: 2013-02-19 18:41:00
Updated: 2013-02-20 10:11:49

A proposal to keep North Carolina teens out of tanning beds was delayed Tuesday in the House Health Committee.

Rep. Mark Hollo, R-Alexander, is sponsor of House Bill 18, the “Youth Skin Cancer Prevention Act." It would raise the state's minimum age for using an indoor tanning bed from 14 to 18, unless the teen has a note from a medical professional.

"It’s a public health bill. It’s a public safety bill," Hollo told the committee, citing a rise in the incidence of skin cancer since 2000. "Exposure is cumulative over your lifetime. The earlier the exposure, the greater your risk of skin cancer."  

The bill has the backing of the American Cancer Society, the North Carolina Medical Society, the North Carolina Pediatrics Society, the North Carolina Oncology Society, the North Carolina Dermatologists and the Child Fatality Task Force, which recommended the legislation.

Duke University Melanoma Center Director Dr. Kelly Nelson delivered a presentation with some graphic photographs of skin cancer – especially melanoma – among young patients who used tanning beds as teenagers. 

"This is really why I feel so strongly about the importance of this bill – because patients die from melanoma. Patients who are entirely too young to die die from melanoma," she told the committee.

"There is no debate in the scientific community that UV exposure is related to skin cancer," Nelson said, noting that a sharp uptick in cases of melanoma among young women over the past decade "corresponds to the same shift in the use of tanning devices."

Nelson said the radiation delivered by tanning beds is substantively different than natural sunlight, offering a much higher percentage of UVA rays, which she said are "more tightly linked to the development of skin cancer." 

"Young people really need protection, and that’s what this bill is about," she said.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention agrees, citing a 2007 study that shows early use of indoor tanning equipment increases melanoma risk by 75 percent.

But another presenter accused Nelson of presenting "a tremendous amount of misinformation."

Joe Levy represents the indoor tanning salon trade group International Smart Tan Network Inc. That group wants the law to stay as it is. 

Melanoma, Levy told the committee, "does not have direct relationship with sunlight. It is a complex relationship if at all."

"It is not a slam dunk," he added.

Levy travels around the country, defending the industry from state legislation aimed at curtailing teen access to indoor tanning. He testified against a similar bill in Connecticut last year.  

Rep. Marilyn Avila, R-Wake, moved "as a scientist" – she was a chemist for Hanes – to postpone the vote until Levy can be given equal time to present his data.

Hollo argued against the delay but said later that he doesn't have a problem with listening to more debate from the other side.  

"I think the science is there, but there was disagreement," Hollo said. "I have no problem letting the other side bring it up and bring in more people if they want to, and we will counter it with scientific fact."

Avila, the House's lead budget writer for Health and Human Services, isn't convinced. 

Asked whether a lobbyist has the same scientific expertise as Duke's melanoma chief, she responded, "If they use the same sources. You don't necessarily have to be a doctor to be able to find data." 

"It's not in his best interest to support something that's going to be detrimental to people's health," she said of Levy. 

Avila says there's a study "out there" that suggests tanning beds only increase the risk of melanoma by one-tenth of 1 percent. 

If teens are banned from tanning beds, Avila says, they will lie out in the sun instead, where they could risk being sunburned.

"The skin cancer issue is not exposure," she said. "The burning is where the issue comes."

Avila said she doesn't believe the many medical groups who support the ban are misguided.  

"But they have a passion, and they see things their way," she added, calling the ban's proponents "emotional."

"You have to be able to stand back objectively and say, 'Yes, there is a problem, but is it this big a problem?'" she said. "We've had scares in the past over things that cause cancer, and we've backed off on them, and I feel like we owe it to the citizens of North Carolina just to be a little more deliberative."

The bill is expected to get more debate and a vote in the House Health Committee next Tuesday.

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39 Comments


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I agree with the science but do not think there should be a law. We do not need more laws. People need to be responsible for their own lives.

"Why is government involved in this at all. Not a government issue."

yeah! When did protecting public health and safety become the responsibility of the government? We should trust private industry to look out for us. Kaitlyn February 20, 2013 2:46 p.m. Report abuse

UMM maybe you should try personal responsibility and look out for yourself and your family???

I don't think there needs to be a ban...I think parents need to tell their 14 year old daughters that you shouldn't lay in a cancer box to bronze your skin.

Wait, there's such a thing as a tanning bed lobbyist??!!!

I believe we should march into both the federal and state legislature and demand that they take up bills declaring the passage of time to be illegal. Each second that goes by we all age, and as we age, our cells all deteriorate. Eventually, through deterioration, we will all die. Since the government is all-knowing and can think and act for us all, then it can stop us from dying. Surely that is the case.

I still can't believe people believe that government is out for your best interests.

All this over the issue of allowing 14,15,16 and 17 year olds to use tanning booths. Pale faces at the prom! NOOOO! only in america.

"Why is government involved in this at all. Not a government issue."

yeah! When did protecting public health and safety become the responsibility of the government? We should trust private industry to look out for us.

"It's not in his best interest to support something that's going to be detrimental to people's health,"

I cannot believe one of our elected representatives is actually this naive. We have the full medical community on one side, and a industry lobbyist on the other, and we are going to give them equal weight on the science? Really?

Profits first in North Carolina, Inc.™!

You know what, teens know that smoking is bad for you. We've know this for decades. Teens still smoke. Make sure they are informed of the situation and then keep your government nanny fingers out of it.

If our government is so concerned about the health and well being of the citizens of North Carolina why don't they make Alcohol and Tobacco illegal? There's more than enough data available that shows the health concerns associated with the both products yet the State makes only a minimum of effort to curb the use of either product. And the State winks and nods at the health risks to others caused by the consumption of these two products.

What will the government go after next? Cheeseburgers? Bacon? Soft drinks?

why is this worthy of even ONE MINUTE of the 'lawmakers' time? If they can drive a car at 15/16, they can decide to listen to the medical experts on melanoma, or not. Why does does this even consume government? Please focus on what's important....and it's not that OTHER story on this WRAL page, about being TOPLESS. We are a screwed up society.

kdawg said at 1322 today: " Only North Carolina's new legislature would listen to a tanning bed lobbyist out to make money instead of science and hard facts about skin cancer. Perhaps the legislature should reconsider "separate but equal," since separate would make more money for the water fountain and bathroom fixture industries. Our new state government is a joke. Great job voters." .. .. .. ..I agree with you!!!

"Neither source is credible."- goobnav

Classic overstatement. It is also speaks to rampant public science illiteracy. The general public (and many legislators) do not understand how basic science works; namely, science is always trying to generate data to refute the "standard understanding" of the time. Ideas are supposed to be challenged- it only then do we know they are right. So, there will always be a thread of controversy, some contrary data, and yes, people trying to manipulate it for their own gain. But that does not mean there is no credibility in scientific research.

To suggest, though, that one lobbyist who is paid to lie, misrepresent and distort has the same credibility as peer-reviewed science is absurd.

Impreach-the-Czar, You really believe that the scientific evidence presented by the following organizations are less credible that a tanning bed salesman??? (American Cancer Society, the North Carolina Medical Society, the North Carolina Pediatrics Society, the North Carolina Oncology Society, the North Carolina Dermatologists and the Child Fatality Task Force.) Sadly, this lack of reasoning is also evident among the current legislative regime. Reality check!

Why is government involved in this at all. Not a government issue.

So not important to so many, as I'm sure mommy and daddy were paying for it, they gave consent! Just like soda, that's not a problem that needs a bill! Let the parents parent!

whew thank goodness for Gov's pre-crimes unit. without these liberty laws we'd have an epidemic of crispy fried teens everywhere

Sounds as if the GOP wants to join Obama on his health care (not to mention NYC with their drink ban) to tell Americans what is good for their health. Why not let the families decide who tans or does not tan!

NC Lawmakers--we want LESS government, not MORE!!! NC GOP, Obama is putting government more into our lives...he does not need your help!

Please wont someone think of the children!

Only North Carolina's new legislature would listen to a tanning bed lobbyist out to make money instead of science and hard facts about skin cancer. Perhaps the legislature should reconsider "separate but equal," since separate would make more money for the water fountain and bathroom fixture industries. Our new state government is a joke. Great job voters.

"Melanoma, Levy told the committee, "does not have direct relationship with sunlight. It is a complex relationship if at all."

A complete lie from a hired gun for the tanning industry.

Tobacco companies still find so-called scientists who are paid to argue there is no causal link between smoking and lung cancer.

We are supposed to believe these hired quacks? Please.

"It's not in his best interest to support something that's going to be detrimental to people's health," she (Avila) said of Levy.

WHHAAAAAAATTT????? It's how he makes his living!

And she's in charge of the DHHS Budget. Paging Dr Wos...

Data is useless until it's manipulated enough to benefit the left.

When will we hear of a bill banning teens from getting behind the wheel of powerful and fast cars? These kill many teens each year.

Theyll just find someone who has one in their home and use it.

"Let's ask: Who is more credible and trustworthy, professionals who care for the medical needs of youth OR a person who is paid to sell a product or service, regardless?"

The important question (as far as our politicians are concerned), is, who gives more money to the politicians?

In addition to scientific research support, the bill has the backing of the American Cancer Society, the North Carolina Medical Society, the North Carolina Pediatrics Society, the North Carolina Oncology Society, the North Carolina Dermatologists and the Child Fatality Task Force, which recommended the legislation.

Let's ask: Who is more credible and trustworthy, professionals who care for the medical needs of youth OR a person who is paid to sell a product or service, regardless? Yet another example of an legislator who is willing to throw logic and humaneness out the window to fulfill a "behind closed doors" promise, and likely receive some "kick back" in return. A few jobs are not worth jeopardizing the health of children. (This is small scale example of greed when compared to the fast track to fracking fiasco- jeopardizing clean water and health to make a few bucks.)

If parents learn how to say no we wouldn't have to waste time and resources on things like this.

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