South Wales Echo

‘I got cancer from using sunbeds and now I spend holidays in the shade’

- MOLLy DOWRICK Reporter molly.dowrick@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A WOMAN who was diagnosed with skin cancer 20 years after she used tanning beds says she lives in constant fear her melanoma could return.

Rebecca Turner, from the Vale of Glamorgan, is urging people to avoid tanning beds, and says they should always wear a minimum of factor 30 sun cream while outside so they don’t face the same frightenin­g diagnosis.

The former nurse, who now works part-time teaching nurses, used sunbeds when she was in her early to mid-20s and has had to have three gruelling surgeries.

Now 45, Rebecca said she thought tanning beds were going out of fashion but was shocked to read they’re back in trend, with several opening in her hometown of Barry. She says she wants to highlight the dangers.

“I used tanning beds in my early to mid-20s, it was just the done thing back then before going on holiday,” she said.

“It was just what everyone seemed to be doing. And I used to tan easily so I’d just go for a couple of sessions before a holiday. I probably only went about 30 times, I felt like I was just preparing my skin so it wouldn’t burn in the sun and so I could get a better tan when I was away.

“I loved the sun growing up, and I know I didn’t use to wear the correct factor sun cream - I now know better. Personally, I think low factor sun creams and tan accelerato­rs should be banned.”

Two decades later, Rebecca noticed a strange lump on her chest and after trips to her GP and dermatolog­ists, she received the news she had melanoma, a type of skin cancer that can spread to other parts of the body.

“In 2022, I noticed a pale patch of skin with a red lump in my chest. The lump was growing and bleeding sometimes and it would itch, so I went to see my GP” she explained.

Rebecca said previously that when she saw her GP, they took photos and sent them to a dermatolog­ist.

Rebecca was told she would hear back within three weeks but after she didn’t hear from them for a month, she chased them up. At the time, the dermatolog­ist requested further photos but weeks went by before any update.

She was told the photos suggested “nothing sinister” but after seeing the dermatolog­ist in person, almost six months after she first raised concerns with her GP, a biopsy was taken.

“I had a letter for an appointmen­t eight weeks after I was first seen. I assumed the labs had not found anything,” she recalled.

“By this point, what they had taken [in the biopsy] had regrown. I was at the appointmen­t on my own and I overheard the consultant say to the healthcare assistant: ‘Of course it has regrown, it is malignant melanoma’.”

Rebecca said she was devastated to hear the news that way. No one was with her – not a family member or dedicated cancer nurse (which she claims she was told afterwards should have been present) – and says she was ushered out of the room still in tears.

“It was not the best of experience­s to be put through,” she told us last year.

Rebecca said she was told the reason she hadn’t immediatel­y been referred to see a dermatolog­ist was because her melanoma was “not a usual presentati­on” of the cancer and

she wants people to be aware it doesn’t look the same for everyone.

“[My lump] It wasn’t like the stereotypi­cal ‘melanoma mole,’ it was a red lump,” she said.

In total, Rebecca has had three surgeries and, while the lump has been removed, she has been left with an 18cm scar across her chest, an indentatio­n on her skin and a further scar below her arm.

She said: “They say it’s highly likely it was the sunbeds and the fact I never wore factor 30 or above. Now I wear factor 50 every day. It only takes one sunburn to massively increase your risk of melanoma - a tan just isn’t worth it.”

Shockingly, Rebecca says friends and acquaintan­ces have written off her experience­s as “just skin cancer,” adding: “The surgeries, the scars and everything - it’s not ‘just’ skin cancer. Melanoma isn’t ‘just’ a skin cancer, it is actually one of the most aggressive and scariest cancers - you’re never free of it.

“It can hide and be dormant, so you have to have regular checks. I go every six months, and I’m always worried this will be the one where it’s come back.”

On holiday, she spends a lot of time in the shade, wearing a large sun hat and factor 50 sun cream, and often SPF clothing.

She says she sees people burn and wants to speak out about what she’s gone through so others are warned and can learn from her mistakes.

She said: “[After having a diagnosis] you think about it all far more critically. You notice more when other people around you are burning, but sometimes there’s just no telling them. I think they should [ban sunbeds] here and I think it should be illegal to sell sun cream if it’s lower than factor 30.”

May is Melanoma Awareness Month and charity Melanoma Focus has shared data that gives a shocking insight into how popular sunbeds are.

The charity reports 27% of adults in Wales use sunbeds and 28% of adults in the UK. Nearly half of them are aged 18 to 25.

A spokespers­on for the charity said: “The research shows that sunbed use is alarmingly high across the UK.

“The charity, along with medical experts, has expressed serious concerns about the high usage of sunbeds and its impact on the rising number of skin cancer cases across the country.

“Melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer, kills 2,300 people in the UK per year. In 2009 the World Health Organizati­on classified ultraviole­t light emitted from tanning beds as carcinogen­ic, and placed artificial sources of ultraviole­t radiation alongside tobacco and asbestos in the highest category of carcinogen.

“Over the last decade, melanoma skin cancer incidence rates have increased by around a third (32%) in the UK and it is estimated that, across the country, sunbeds cause about 440 melanomas and around 100 deaths each year. There are now 870 new cases in Wales every year.”

Melanoma Focus CEO Susanna Daniels said: “We strongly advise against using sunbeds in order to protect your skin and reduce your chances of being diagnosed with melanoma or other skin cancers.”

Rebecca has praised the support she has received from Melanoma Focus and Melanoma-Me.

She and others have set up a local support group at Maggie’s cancer support centre at Velindre Hospital Cancer Centre in Cardiff. The group meets once a month and is open to anyone who has experience­d melanoma.

Rebecca’s message to anyone who has been diagnosed with melanoma is: “It can be a very lonely journey, but you are not alone.”

Melanoma Focus runs a free and confidenti­al helpline on 0808 801 0777.

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 ?? ROB BROWNE ?? Rebecca Turner is urging people to avoid tanning beds after she was diagnosed with melanoma
ROB BROWNE Rebecca Turner is urging people to avoid tanning beds after she was diagnosed with melanoma
 ?? ?? Rebecca was left with an 18cm scar after surgery
Rebecca was left with an 18cm scar after surgery

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