Cancer survivor says tanning restrictions will protect Kansas teens

Amy Holdman, a 41-year-old mother of two from Overland Park, believes her frequent use of tanning beds as a teenager is the reason for three surgeries in the past year to remove cancerous skin from both arms. She will speak Tuesday to a legislative committee in support of a bill that would prohibit tanning salons from allowing people under 18 to use ultraviolet beds. (Photo by Jim McLean, KHI News Service)
Amy Holdman, a 41-year-old mother of two from Overland Park, believes her frequent use of tanning beds as a teenager is the reason for three surgeries in the past year to remove cancerous skin from both arms. She will speak Tuesday to a legislative committee in support of a bill that would prohibit tanning salons from allowing people under 18 to use ultraviolet beds. (Photo by Jim McLean, KHI News Service)

Overland Park woman to testify for bill to prohibit use of tanning beds before age 18

by Jim McLean, KHI News Service

Amy Holdman has a cautionary tale for Kansas lawmakers.

The 41-year-old mother of two from Overland Park is convinced that her frequent use of tanning beds as a teenager and young adult is the reason she’s had to endure three surgeries in the past year to remove chunks of cancerous skin from both arms.

Doctors had to dig deep to remove melanoma cancer cells from her right forearm in February 2015. In the months that followed, she underwent dozens of painful biopsies and two more scarring surgeries.

“I truly believe that I got melanoma later in life because of tanning bed use when I was younger,” Holdman said during a recent interview at her home.

As a high school and college student, Holdman said she didn’t know anything about the risks she was taking.

“I was on the dance team, so we would wear the little outfits and you wanted to be tan and cute,” she said. “And then in college, I was actually a nanny for a family that had a tanning bed in their house. Being a college kid with no money, that sounded great at the time.”

But if she could travel back in time knowing what she now knows, Holdman said she would give her “16-year-old self” a sobering warning.

“I’m a single mom with two daughters, and there is nothing more important to me than to be here for them,” she said. “To think that could be taken away from me because I was worried about a tan is sickening to me at the age of 41.”

Melanoma is the most dangerous type of skin cancer because it is more likely than basal cell and squamous cell cancers to spread to other parts of the body, according to the American Cancer Society. Still, like most forms of skin cancer it is curable if detected early enough.

“I hope I’m out of the woods,” Holdman said, noting that in addition to getting comprehensive skin examinations every three months doctors perform periodic lung and liver scans to ensure that she’s cancer free.

“The fear is always in your head that something could come back later,” she said.

Holdman is among those scheduled to testify Tuesday to the House Health and Human Services Committee in support of House Bill 2369, which would prohibit tanning salons from allowing people under 18 to use ultraviolet beds. Businesses that violate the ban could be fined up to $250 per violation.

Anticipating pushback from lawmakers opposed to placing restrictions on private businesses, Holdman is prepared to argue that the health hazards of tanning are similar to those posed by smoking.

“It’s just like tobacco,” she said. “People can’t smoke legally until they’re 18.”

It’s a fair comparison, according to research cited in a fact sheet compiled by the cancer society’s lobbying arm, the Cancer Action Network. It says that “the dangers of tanning devices are so serious” that the World Health Organization has labeled them “carcinogenic to humans” along with tobacco and asbestos.

A 2012 British study cited in the fact sheet found that using a tanning device before the age of 35 increased people’s risk of later developing melanoma by 59 percent. Tanning bed use before age 25 increased the risk of squamous cell and basal cell carcinomas by 102 percent and 40 percent respectively, according to another 2012 study.

The tanning industry is pushing back by questioning both the research findings and the motives of the cancer society and other groups that it says are part of a “sun scare” campaign.

Salon owners from across the country banded together in 2012 to form the American Suntanning Association.

At the time, founding ASA board member Diane Lucas, chief executive of Palm Beach Tan, a national salon chain, said: “There are many misconceptions about the risks associated with indoor tanning. One of the primary roles of the ASA is to address and factually dispel these myths and educate the public about intelligent, practical sun care for tanners and non-tanners.”

The Kansas bill, which was introduced a year ago but is just now getting a hearing in committee, targets people under 18 because of the high rate of tanning bed use among teenage girls. According to a 2013 survey done by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 27 percent of 12th grade girls reported using tanning beds in the previous year, with many describing their use as frequent.

Kansas is one of seven states that places no restrictions on the use of tanning devices, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Thirteen states have laws that ban the use of ultraviolet tanning devices by people under 18, while others require parental approval or regulate the length of exposure time.

The hearing on the Kansas bill is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in room 546-South at the Statehouse.

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

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Piper results

The Piper cheer and dance squads won awards recently. (Photo from Piper school district)
The Piper cheer and dance squads won awards recently. (Photo from Piper school district)

Piper High School – cheer-dance
– Cheer
o superior rating – performance, technique, jumps, spirit
o excellent rating – stunts
– Dance
o Superior rating – performance, technique, spirit, formations

Piper Middle School – boys basketball vs. Basehor-Linwood
– 8th
o A won 62-56 (OT)
o B lost 28-36
– 7th
o A lost 25-39
o B lost 33-36 (OT)

– From Doug Key, Piper High School activities director

KCKCC to celebrate Valentine’s Day with fitness challenge

by Kelly Rogge

Kansas City Kansas Community College’s Wellness and Fitness Center wants the campus community to celebrate Valentine’s Day a different way this year – by focusing on their heart health.

This is the third year for the “Have a Heart Healthy Valentine’s Day,” which will be 5:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 16, at the Wellness and Fitness Center on the KCKCC main campus, 7250 State Ave. There will be two Technogym recumbent bicycles provided for the event – one designated for KCKCC employees only and one for student and community member use.

“The purpose of hosting the Heart Healthy event at the KCKCC Wellness Center is to encourage students, employees and community members to participate in healthy activity for Valentine’s Day,” said Pam Hall, wellness specialist at the KCKCC Wellness and Fitness Center. “People usually start out the New Year motivated to include physical activity in their everyday lives then they fall off in February. This is an opportunity to team up and jump into some cardiovascular activity to celebrate Valentine’s Day in a healthy way.”

Those interested in participating can sign-up at the Wellness Center for a pre-determined time slot (30 minutes). The goal is to complete 15 hours of cardiovascular exercise during the event as well as to encourage KCKCC employees, students and community members to team up in an attempt to ride the most miles and expend the most calories on Valentine’s Day.

“February is also American Heart Month,” Hall said. “This a great month to encourage regular physical activity as a secret weapon against heart disease. Eighty percent of heart disease and stroke are preventable.”

Participants who complete their full 30-minute time slot will be entered into a prize drawing. The 30 minutes can only be completed within the designated time slot. Participants cannot go into the next time slot to accrue their 30 minutes. The 30 minutes is not required, but anything less will not qualify for the prize drawing.

“Preventing heart disease and stroke is important, and we encourage and educate people to make one healthy behavior change,” Hall said. “Once they are consistently adapting to that healthy behavior change, they can adopt another one and then disease prevention will follow. Healthy behavior could include increasing exercise, eating healthier fats and healthier diet, getting your cholesterol checked, losing weight and getting enough sleep.”

For more information or to register for the “Have a Heart Healthy Valentine’s Day,” call the Wellness and Fitness Center at 913- 288-7610 to see which time slots are available. Participants must be at least 18-years-old. Information is also available by contacting Pam Hall at [email protected].

Kelly Rogge is the public information supervisor at KCKCC.