Skin cancer does not make you look more attractive
University
of South Australia
Social media smarts could make you less susceptible to skin cancer as new research shows that media literacy skills can help change people's attitudes about what is believed to be the 'tanned ideal'.
Conducted
by the University of South Australia, the research tested the ability of social
media to influence people's perceptions of tanning, finding that the greater an
individual's ability to critically access and evaluate social media posts, the
less likely they were to idealise a golden tan.
The
world-first study found that individuals with higher media literacy
capabilities were much less likely to embrace or compare themselves to a tanned
ideal, yet the opposite was true for those with fewer media literacy skills.
Lead researcher, UniSA's Dr John Mingoia, says the findings highlight the importance of incorporating media literacy into sun safe education initiatives.
"The
desire for tanned skin has long been part of Australian culture, yet despite
everything we know about the dangers of tanning and the risk of skin cancer,
people are still engaging in unsafe sun behaviour in the quest for what they
consider a healthy golden glow," Dr Mingoia says.
"In
Australia, where we're exposed to some of the highest levels of UV radiation in
the world (and correspondingly, have one of the highest rates of skin cancer in
the world), the desire for tanned skin is undeniably dangerous.
"The
challenge is that people are exposed to images of the 'tanned ideal' on social
media platforms -- Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat and YouTube -- where their
perceptions of attractiveness are shaped and reinforced by images from
advertisers, influencers, bloggers, and friends, many of which have been
artificially enhanced or manipulated.
"It's
this kind of everyday organic content that we're trying to combat, so that
young adults can more easily identify the pervasive way that social media can
influence their knowledge, attitudes and behaviours.
"Adding
such media literacy skills to Australia's existing and well-developed sun safe
messages and campaigns will help individuals better manage their responses to
media exposure, and importantly reduce any potentially negative
self-comparisons."
Skin
cancer is the most common cancer worldwide, with 2-3 million non-melanoma skin
cancers and 132,000 melanoma skin cancers occurring each year. In Australia,
approximately, two in three Australian will be diagnosed with skin cancer by
the time they are 70.
The
study tested the responses of 151 young Australian adults (61 male and 90
females, aged 18-29) after exposure to a series of social media posts that
featured either tanned or paler-skinned models.
The most common skin type in the study was Fitzpatrick skin Type III (45 per cent) -- people whose skin reacts to the sun by possibly freckling, burning on occasion, and sometimes tanning. Media literacy was assessed using the Media Attitudes Questionnaire (MAQ), a Likert-type ranking scale, that was adapted to test media literacy in relation to the tanned ideal.
The most common skin type in the study was Fitzpatrick skin Type III (45 per cent) -- people whose skin reacts to the sun by possibly freckling, burning on occasion, and sometimes tanning. Media literacy was assessed using the Media Attitudes Questionnaire (MAQ), a Likert-type ranking scale, that was adapted to test media literacy in relation to the tanned ideal.
The
study showed that, on average, participants used social media for close to 173
minutes (three hours) a day, splitting their time between Facebook (96.7 per
cent), YouTube (84.8 per cent), Instagram (69.5 per cent) and SnapChat (69.5
per cent).
Dr
Mingoia says that social media presents additional barriers to healthy sun
behaviours.
"Increasing
people's knowledge of how social media messages are constructed, manipulated
and altered, as well as their capacity to impact cognition and attitudes, will
improve awareness and scepticism of content on social media," Dr Mingoia
says.
"What
we're looking to do is add a complementary layer to existing sun safe education
which we hope will lead to a reduced acceptance of what people see relating to
tanned ideals on social media and consequently, better health outcomes.
"With
more than 90 per cent of young adults regularly using social media, it's a
space we cannot afford to overlook in the battle to combat skin cancer."