Auriga - Our Business is Your Health
Capitalizing on high-revenue markets and opportunities in the pharmaceutical industry through proactive sales, integrated marketing and advanced in-house drug development capabilities
  • Demo Video
  • Private Messages
  • Edit My Profile
  • View/Edit Portfolio

AGORACOM News Flash

AGORACOM Wire - Wednesday February 15th, 2012

Breaking News ....

Lomiko (LMR: TSX-V) to Complete 43-101 Report on Previous Drilling at the Quatre Milles Graphite Property *CLIENT* Read More

Top Sector Stories ....

Strike Graphite Corp. (TSXV:SRK) Acquires Wagon Graphite Project in Quebec in Vicinity of Timcal's Lac des Iles Graphite Mine *CLIENT* Read More  |  Profile

Strike Graphite goes "Beyond the Press Release"

McLaren Resources (CNSX:MCL) Drills 7.0 Grams Gold Over 7.4 Metres at the TimGinn Property Located Adjacent to the Hollinger Mine *CLIENT* Read More | Watch Beyond the Press Release

DONNER METALS INTERVIEW: David Patterson Discusses the Bracemac-McLeod Mine Development Beyond the Press Release

 AGORACOM Launches GraphiteStocksBlog.com

We're proud to announce the launch of GraphiteStocksBlog.com a website dedicated to the needs of investors and companies in the fast growing Graphite industry.

INAUGURAL GRAPHITE SPONSORS

Message: The Claim: Darker Skin Protects Against Skin Cancer

Generic_profile
Rank: [?]
Treasurer
Points: [?]
506
Rating: [?]
Votes: 3 Score: 3.3
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
Did you know? You can earn activity points by filling your profile with information about yourself (what city you live in, your favorite team, blogs etc.

The Claim: Darker Skin Protects Against Skin Cancer

posted on May 15, 07 12:13PM

It is well known that people with darker skin get deeper tans and burn less quickly than other people. But does that mean better protection against skin cancer?

The answer is not clear-cut. Although darker-skinned people face a lower risk of skin cancer, they are more likely to develop more aggressive forms of the disease and more likely to die from it.

A large part of the problem is a false sense of security. Dark skin has higher amounts of melanin that can filter as much as twice the amount of ultraviolet radiation as paler skin. But that protection still falls short of what doctors recommend when using sunscreen: a skin protection factor, or SPF, of 15 or more. And because many people with dark skin believe that it provides complete immunity, experts say, they often overlook early warning signs.

A 2006 study in The Archives of Internal Medicine looked at more than 1,500 people with melanoma. It found that whites were far less likely to have late-stage melanoma than blacks, Hispanics, American Indians and Asians. On average, whites also had a greater five-year survival rate (90 percent) than the others (less than 80 percent).

Another study last year in The Archives of Dermatology looked at 1,700 cases of melanoma reported in Florida over a five-year period and had similar results.

THE BOTTOM LINE

People with darker skin tones have a lower risk of skin cancer, but are more likely to die from it.

# Title Rating Author / Date
2
May 16, 07 01:05PM
3
May 17, 07 11:43AM
4
May 23, 07 08:13AM

New Message

Please login to post a reply

AGORACOM Quick Tips

AGORACOM 100 - The Top 100 Small Caps ... Find Your Next Investment

President's D.D.

New feature: Hub Presidents can add important links here.

Stock Quote