Dear patients, friends and colleagues,
May is Skin Cancer Awareness Month. I wanted to share with you some experiences we have had in the past year in our practice. In the first six weeks of 2007 alone, we diagnosed 5 melanomas. That is quite a high number compared to what the trends have been! Moreover, the diagnosed melanomas have been found in all age groups. A 19 year old patient of ours, Laura Holloway, developed a melanoma on her ear and her neck last summer, just as she was leaving for college. She was willing to share with you a letter that she emailed to her friends and other volleyball players:
“I am a twenty years old and play volleyball for Penn State University. I was diagnosed with skin cancer, melanoma, at 19. That was one of the worst days of my life. Receiving a call from Dr. Taub saying I have cancer was so hard. I immediately thought, “no more volleyball, no more hair, no more of my lifestyle.” Luckily my cancer was caught early and I didn’t have to undergo any chemotherapy. I do though have a couple scars that help tell my story. An eighth of my ear was removed and I have a very long incision on the side of my neck. It is very noticeable. People ask me what happened all the time. I simply tell them to stay out of the sun. When I was younger I lived at the beach. I loved to lay out. My friends and I would jump one very opportunity to sun bathe on my roof (because the black tar helped attract more rays). My teammates and I use to live in the tanning salons. Volleyball players in general like their legs to be bronzed when our uniforms consist of a tight shirt and barely any bottoms. But my teammates and I have found other ways to keep our legs tan. We use lots of different lotions which you can find at almost any drugstore. My teammates and I love how our skin feels. After almost a year with no sun my skin feels so much healthier. It is hard to tell someone to stay out of the sun. It makes us feel good. But it is slowly aging our skin and killing us off. Protect yourself. Wear sunscreen everytime you go outside. Because your life is much more precious than a nice tan.”
Recently, Miss Maryland (from the Miss USA pageant) became a spokesperson for the American Academy of Dermatology to raise awareness amongst teenagers to avoid excessive sun exposure and tanning booths. Also a melanoma survivor, she believes her condition was linked to her tanning bed usage as well. “Leitz was diagnosed with stage II melanoma when she was 20 and has undergone several surgeries, one of which left her with an eight-inch scar on her back.” (Dermatology Times December 2006)
It is obvious from stories such as these that excessive sun exposure and tanning beds ARE NOT SAFE. Please don’t go in them or allow your teenages to do so. A spray or applied tan is fine, if having the appearance of tan is a social necessity! These are inert dyes that are not absorbed into your system. Please remember to apply sun screen with SPF30 and zinc oxide daily to your face and body. In honor of Skin Cancer Awareness Month, 5% of proceeds of sun screen sales will be donated to the Skin Cancer Foundation during the month of May.
We are beginning the build out for our new Skinfo® boutique which will be on the ground floor of the City Park mall between Lori’s Shoes and Ticklebug. We are hoping to open in May. Keep an eye out for an announcement with grand opening events, specials and new products coming soon.
Have a great spring, (Go Cubs!)
Amy Forman Taub, MD
And the Staff of Advanced Dermatology, Skinfo and SKINQRI

















