Dispatch: Tanning Salons Get Burned

By ACSH Staff — Jul 26, 2010
According to today’s New York Post exposé on indoor tanning, salon employees are not properly warning customers that tanning increases their risk of cancer, nor are they collecting signed parental permission forms from everyone under 18, as mandated by New York State law. New York's Best Tan: A Great Source For Vitamin D

According to today’s New York Post exposé on indoor tanning, salon employees are not properly warning customers that tanning increases their risk of cancer, nor are they collecting signed parental permission forms from everyone under 18, as mandated by New York State law.
New York's Best Tan: A Great Source For Vitamin D
ACSH’s Jeff Stier got into thinking about the Post’s article after he spotted an ad for NYC indoor tanning salon City Sun on his way to work this morning. “A Great Source of Vitamin D,” the ad boasts.

“Is there a qualitative difference between the risk of cancer from UV exposure in a tanning bed versus the sun?” Stier wonders.

This question underscores the complexity of regulating indoor tanning salons because “if they are required to issue warnings about the health risks of UV-ray exposure, then shouldn’t we have the same warning labels on city parks and beaches?” asks Stier. “Teens wouldn’t spend all day in a tanning bed, but they could easily spend all day at the beach without receiving any information on health risks. If they’re used differently, but are equally dangerous, perhaps the city should institute beach warning labels in order to regulate tanning in a more fair and balanced manner.”

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