Showing posts with label skin cancer screening free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label skin cancer screening free. Show all posts

Friday, May 8, 2009

May is Skin Cancer Awareness Month--and Olay wants you to get a FREE skin cancer screening

It's hard to find anything more budget-friendly than "free." Olay has generously set up a program with dermatologists all over the country to offer free skin cancer screenings. FREE. No co-pay, no nothing. No insurance (or anything else) required.

Before you just shrug that off, take a look at some of these skin cancer statistics from the American Cancer Society:
  • One person dies of skin cancer every hour in the United States*

  • 62,480 people were diagnosed with melanoma (the deadliest form of skin cancer) in 2008

  • Melanoma is the seventh most common form of cancer among women

  • One in five Americans will be diagnosed with skin cancer over the course of their lives and one in 200 women aged 40-59 will develop melanoma

  • When detected and treated early, the five year survival rate for melanoma is 99%, but once it has spread, that number drops to only 15%*

  • UV exposure at tanning salons is just as risky as sunbathing outside

  • People with fair skin that burns rather than tans, people with red hair and people with blue eyes are at greater risk of developing skin cancer

  • People who have many (extensive) freckles on their upper back are at a greater risk of developing skin cancer

  • People who have a history of sunburns, especially during childhood, are at a greater risk

  • The depletion of the ozone layer may be significantly affecting the incidence of melanoma
    Exposure to ultraviolet radiation from the sun between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. and exposure at high altitudes are the most dangerous times to be exposed to the sun

  • Those with an impaired immune system — especially those who have had an organ transplant, leukemia or lymphoma — are at a greater risk of melanoma

  • According to one study, the use of a sunscreen of SPF 15 or higher during the first 18 years of life would cut lifetime risk of melanoma by 78%
Those are pretty sobering statistics, so give some thought to taking advantage of the free screening. You can find a list of participating dermatologists in your area here, and can also email your girlfriends with a heads-up. Heck, make it a group activity, and take a group of friends with you so you can all take advantage of the free screening.
Taking care of your skin is much more than a surface-level vanity activity--your very life may depend on it. Go see Dr. Dermatologist for the screening, and always wear sunscreen!