Skin cancer’s prevention in the light of current medical knowledge

Among all diagnosed malignancies, skin cancers account for more than 30-50%. Caucasian patients have a lifetime risk of more than 20%. The incidence increases with the age of patients. In 2017, there were over 14,000 new cases in Poland. It can be expected that these results are underestimated due...

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Main Authors: Małgorzata Milanowska, Aleksandra Grudzińska, Dominika Jarosz, Hanna Tsitko, Paulina Dudzińska
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kazimierz Wielki University 2023-04-01
Series:Journal of Education, Health and Sport
Subjects:
Online Access:https://apcz.umk.pl/JEHS/article/view/43300
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author Małgorzata Milanowska
Aleksandra Grudzińska
Dominika Jarosz
Hanna Tsitko
Paulina Dudzińska
author_facet Małgorzata Milanowska
Aleksandra Grudzińska
Dominika Jarosz
Hanna Tsitko
Paulina Dudzińska
author_sort Małgorzata Milanowska
collection DOAJ
description Among all diagnosed malignancies, skin cancers account for more than 30-50%. Caucasian patients have a lifetime risk of more than 20%. The incidence increases with the age of patients. In 2017, there were over 14,000 new cases in Poland. It can be expected that these results are underestimated due to incomplete registration of new cases in the National Cancer Registry.(1,2)The most common skin cancer is basal cell carcinoma - over 80% of cases. In second place is squamous cell carcinoma - 15-20%. Other types are less common.(1)The appearance of a new mole or a change in the appearance of an existing one is often missed at the beginning, and even if it is noticed, it is underestimated by the patient. Therefore, detection rate of skin cancer, including melanoma at an early stage, is unfortunately relatively low.The incidence of skin cancer is constantly increasing, which is an important epidemiological problem of modern medicine.(2)Patient education should focus on behaviors that the patient can influence and modify, including: regular visits to a dermatologist and undergoing a dermatoscopic examination, the use of sunscreen with a high UV factor, the use of special protective clothing, sunglasses, covering head when under sun’s exposure, moderate overall sun exposure, avoiding sunburn, not using a tanning bed.The purpose of this review was to assess the current literature on the impact of educating the public and promoting sun protection as a necessary method to directly reduce the incidence of skin cancer.The literature was searched in Pubmed and Google Scholar databases.
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spelling doaj.art-e16543a5295344d0816b70b8feda81ef2023-05-01T10:45:29ZengKazimierz Wielki UniversityJournal of Education, Health and Sport2391-83062023-04-0123110.12775/JEHS.2023.23.01.004Skin cancer’s prevention in the light of current medical knowledgeMałgorzata Milanowska0Aleksandra Grudzińska1Dominika Jarosz2Hanna Tsitko3Paulina Dudzińska4Uniwersytet Medyczny w LublinieUniwersytet Medyczny w LublinieUniwersytet Medyczny w LublinieUniwersytet Medyczny w LublinieUniwersytet Medyczny w Lublinie Among all diagnosed malignancies, skin cancers account for more than 30-50%. Caucasian patients have a lifetime risk of more than 20%. The incidence increases with the age of patients. In 2017, there were over 14,000 new cases in Poland. It can be expected that these results are underestimated due to incomplete registration of new cases in the National Cancer Registry.(1,2)The most common skin cancer is basal cell carcinoma - over 80% of cases. In second place is squamous cell carcinoma - 15-20%. Other types are less common.(1)The appearance of a new mole or a change in the appearance of an existing one is often missed at the beginning, and even if it is noticed, it is underestimated by the patient. Therefore, detection rate of skin cancer, including melanoma at an early stage, is unfortunately relatively low.The incidence of skin cancer is constantly increasing, which is an important epidemiological problem of modern medicine.(2)Patient education should focus on behaviors that the patient can influence and modify, including: regular visits to a dermatologist and undergoing a dermatoscopic examination, the use of sunscreen with a high UV factor, the use of special protective clothing, sunglasses, covering head when under sun’s exposure, moderate overall sun exposure, avoiding sunburn, not using a tanning bed.The purpose of this review was to assess the current literature on the impact of educating the public and promoting sun protection as a necessary method to directly reduce the incidence of skin cancer.The literature was searched in Pubmed and Google Scholar databases. https://apcz.umk.pl/JEHS/article/view/43300melanomaSPFsun protectionsun protection factorsunscreenphotodamage
spellingShingle Małgorzata Milanowska
Aleksandra Grudzińska
Dominika Jarosz
Hanna Tsitko
Paulina Dudzińska
Skin cancer’s prevention in the light of current medical knowledge
Journal of Education, Health and Sport
melanoma
SPF
sun protection
sun protection factor
sunscreen
photodamage
title Skin cancer’s prevention in the light of current medical knowledge
title_full Skin cancer’s prevention in the light of current medical knowledge
title_fullStr Skin cancer’s prevention in the light of current medical knowledge
title_full_unstemmed Skin cancer’s prevention in the light of current medical knowledge
title_short Skin cancer’s prevention in the light of current medical knowledge
title_sort skin cancer s prevention in the light of current medical knowledge
topic melanoma
SPF
sun protection
sun protection factor
sunscreen
photodamage
url https://apcz.umk.pl/JEHS/article/view/43300
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AT aleksandragrudzinska skincancerspreventioninthelightofcurrentmedicalknowledge
AT dominikajarosz skincancerspreventioninthelightofcurrentmedicalknowledge
AT hannatsitko skincancerspreventioninthelightofcurrentmedicalknowledge
AT paulinadudzinska skincancerspreventioninthelightofcurrentmedicalknowledge