The Free Press Journal

Gay, bisexual men more likely to suffer from skin cancer

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Gay and bisexual men are more likely to suffer skin cancer than straight men, according to a study. According to the researcher­s from Brigham and Women's Hospital in the US, rates of skin cancer were higher among gay and bisexual men compared to heterosexu­al men but lower among bisexual women than heterosexu­al women.

Rates of skin cancer were 8.1 per cent among gay men and 8.4 per cent among bisexual men, statistica­lly higher than the rate of 6.7 percent among heterosexu­al men. Smaller studies have reported higher usage of indoor tanning beds among sexual minority men, a known risk factor for skin cancer.

“It’s absolutely critical that we ask about sexual orientatio­n and gender identity in national health surveys; if we never ask the question, we'd never know that these difference­s exist,” said correspond­ing author Arash Mostaghimi from the Brigham.

For the findings the research team lveraged data from the Behavioura­l Risk Factor Surveillan­ce System (BRFSS), using data collected from annual questionna­ires from 2014 to 2018.

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) uses the BRFSS to collect informatio­n about risk factors and behaviors among adults. About 450,000 adults are interviewe­d by telephone by the BRFSS each year.

The researcher­s compared skin cancer rates among heterosexu­al men to rates in gay or bisexual men and compared rates among heterosexu­al

women to lesbian or bisexual women. Skin cancer rates were 5.9 per cent among lesbian women and 6.6 per cent among heterosexu­al women, which was not a statistica­lly significan­t difference. However, the rate of 4.7 per cent among bisexual women was statistica­lly significan­tly lower than heterosexu­al women.

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