Tanning beds first hit the US market in the 1970s, and by the mid-2010s, had grown into a US$3-billion-a-year industry. As of 2013, an estimated 7.8 million women and 1.9 million men in the US hit the ...
Tanning beds are not safe and pose significant health risks, especially to skin and eye health. Health organizations worldwide strongly discourage their use. Risks of tanning beds include skin cancer, ...
Experts have warned about the dangers of 'tan-fluencers' who promote the use of high-risk tanning methods such as sunbeds and ...
Researchers discovered that tanning beds cause widespread, mutation-laden DNA damage across almost all skin, explaining the sharply increased melanoma risk. Single-cell genomic analysis revealed ...
HERRIN - A new tanning procedure may soon revolutionize the industry. Emily Tope of Herrin tries the new Healthy Tan airbrush procedure applied by Jana Engram, owner of EJ's Day Spa.