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Sarah Palin, Vitamin D and tanning beds part 6: conclusion
This may surprise you, but I believe it is
a good idea to be checked regularly by a dermatologist to
assess any changes that may occur to your skin.
That advice, however, is most important
for those who do not use tanning beds or get regular
sunlight, since more melanomas occur among those who receive
little or no UVB (see previous posts).
So let's do a few mathematics.
Scientists now estimate that
maintaining a vitamin D blood level of 55ng/ml would prevent
the breast-cancer deaths of 85,000 US women yearly.[1]
Melanoma, on the other hand, takes the
lives of about 3,020 women per year.[2]
If you assumed that tanning causes 3,020
deaths from melanoma (which it does not), but prevents
85,000 breast cancer deaths, which would you rather take a
chance with? Such an analysis, of course, would not even
take into consideration the other diseases that are
prevented by high vitamin D levels.
For example, Australian researchers did an
analysis to determine the risk of death from bone disease
that would occur if the anti-sunlight advocates had their
way.
For the purposes of their analysis, they
assumed that sunlight caused melanoma.
They then calculated that for every
case of melanoma death and disability prevented by
avoiding the sun, there would be 2,000 cases of death
disability caused by bone diseases alone due to lack of
vitamin D.[3]
The good news is that sunlight does not
cause melanoma; we have already established that regular
exposure prevents melanoma.
If Sarah Palin is using her tanning bed in
a safe and sane manner, she has one of the best
health-promoting devices ever developed.
The vitamin D she receives from the UVB
light is reducing her risk of twenty cancers and is also
reducing her risk of heart disease, osteoporosis,
hypertension, MS, lupus, diabetes and approximately 80 more
diseases in which vitamin D deficiency is implicated.
So Sarah, go ahead and enjoy that tanning
bed!
[1] Garland, C et al. What is the
dose-response relationship between vitamin D and cancer
risk? Nutrition Reviews 2007;65:S91-5.
[2] American Cancer Society Statistics 2008.
[3] Lucas, R, et al. Estimating the global disease burden
due to ultraviolet radiation exposure.
Int. J. Epidemiol. Advance Access published February 14,
2008.
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