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Can you become addicted to tanning beds?

By David Levitan David Levitan Mon Apr 19, 4:44 pm ET

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) If you're someone who lies in a tanning bed too

much, you may be likely to suffer from addictive behavior often seen with

substance abuse, as well as anxiety, according to a new study.

Catherine Mosher and Sharon Danoff-Burg, researchers at Memorial

Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and the State University of New York, Albany,

respectively, asked 229 students at a large northeastern university about

alcohol and substance abuse behaviors; all of the students reported using

indoor tanning facilities in the previous year.

Fifty of the study participants, or just under 22 percent, met the criteria for

addiction on both of the two questionnaires. Those who met the criteria for

addiction had in fact used tanning facilities more frequently in the previous

year than those who weren't addicted.

Those 50 participants also had very slightly higher levels of anxiety symptoms,

as well as higher rates of alcohol and marijuana use.

Mosher told Reuters Health by e-mail that the study was only able to note the

connections between tanning and other factors like anxiety and substance use,

and there is no way to tell if one of these behaviors actually leads to the

other.

"From a public health perspective, the findings suggest that there may be a

subgroup of individuals who are addicted to indoor tanning and have an

underlying mood disturbance," Mosher said.

This is not the first study suggesting that tanning - whether outdoors or on

tanning beds -- can be addicting. Others have found that as many as half young

adults and beachgoers meet some criteria for a "substance-related disorder"

when it comes to tanning. Previous research has also linked tanning and

cigarette smoking.

John Overstreet, a spokesperson for the Indoor Tanning Association, dismissed

the idea that excessive tanning should be called an addiction.

"They're labeling this as an addiction to attract your attention, the media's

attention, but whether it is useful science, I think the jury is very much out

on it," he told Reuters Health.

The tanning industry, he said, preaches moderation when it comes to the use of

tanning devices. "There is one thing we all agree on, that you've got to avoid

sunburning and avoid overexposure," he said.

According to the Association, 30 million people in the United States use indoor

tanning facilities, making it a $5 billion industry.

It is well established that excessive exposure to ultraviolet radiation, both

from the sun and from indoor facilities, can increase the risk of skin cancer.

Mosher suggested that if further studies confirm the link between addictive

tanning behavior, anxiety and substance use, treating those underlying mood

disorders might be a way to reduce tanning and the associated skin cancer risk.

SOURCE: http://archderm.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/short/146/4/412 Archives of

Dermatology, April 2010.