United Kingdom News

She used sunbeds for a year—cancer followed

A woman who developed skin cancer after using sunbeds for merely a year has cautioned “the tan is short lived – but the damage is lifelong” as a charity disclosed that diagnoses have reached an all-time high. Cancer Research UK announced today that the number of new melanoma skin cancer cases diagnosed annually has exceeded 20,000 for the first time in the UK. Stacey Galifskiy, 39, first used sunbeds at 19 to achieve a “summer glow” and continued with eight-minute sessions weekly for approximately a

year. Two decades later, the tattoo artist from Fife, Scotland, only identified a cancerous discoloured mole on her forehead. Across three years, Stacey has undergone 13 operations to remove eight moles and now receives annual mole mapping to monitor for changes. Stacey is convinced she contracted skin cancer from using sunbeds 20 years previously. Cancer Research UK attributes excessive exposure to ultraviolet (UV) light from the sun or sunbeds as contributing to the surge in figures. The charity’s examination of the latest complete data, for

2022, revealed 20,980 new melanoma cases in the UK – the highest on record. Stacey commented: “It’s quite shocking that skin cancer is going up despite the fact we have known for a long time that sunbeds and exposure cause cancer. “Having a summer tan is short lived – but the damage is lifelong. “Nobody will remember in five years how dark your skin was that one summer for that one night out. “The skin is the largest organ of your body – people don’t

think about melanoma the way they do about other cancers. “But it’s such a serious condition – and it can spread to other areas too.” Stacey started using sunbeds as a teenager despite warnings against it. Following a year, she chose to quit, and returned to being incredibly sun-aware, ensuring she applied factor 50, and remained in the shade whenever feasible. In 2021, Stacey encountered a mate she hadn’t seen for seven months, who spotted that the mole on her forehead had altered colour, and

appeared “angry”. Stacey underwent four procedures to eliminate it, and to draw her skin forward to conceal the scar. She explained: “The first two operations were OK, but the last two were really painful. I had a lot of tingling and pain across my scalp for months afterward.” Stacey found the ordeal deeply frightening, and revealed she became profoundly “distrustful” of her body subsequently. “I was suspicious of every mole on my body,” she stated. Stacey had additional procedures to eliminate two moles from her

forehead, two from her cheek, one from her ear, one from her stomach, two on her leg, and one on her bum. Three of the moles were early-stage skin cancer, while the others were actively developing moles, indicating they could turn cancerous if left untreated. Stacey’s cancer scare left her profoundly anxious, and she started monitoring her remaining 73 moles, to track any alterations. She recalled: “My body became the enemy. I counted my moles limb by limb and took photos of them all to

refer back to. “I got diagnosed with health anxiety, it was debilitating.” Stacey now attends an annual mole mapping appointment, which sets her back £185 a session — something she describes as “worth every penny”. Looking back on her experience, she revealed her desire to highlight the significance of sun safety and avoiding sunbeds altogether. She said: “Sunbeds – don’t bother. “There are lovely moisturisers out there that have a gradual tan in them – moisture and a lovely glow with no potential of sun

damage. “Or just embrace your natural skin tone and be happy in the skin you’re in.”

sunbeds, melanoma, skin cancer, Cancer Research UK, UV exposure, mole mapping, Fife, Stacey Galifskiy

4 Comments

  1. Wait so it took 20 years for cancer to show up?? That’s crazy. I thought the danger was like immediate or something.

  2. This is probably why everyone I know has weird moles now. Also “melanoma” sounds like a made up scary word. If it’s the UV from sunbeds then why do some people tan and never get it?

  3. 13 operations over 3 years?? I don’t get how they can say she “used a sunbed for a year” and that’s what caused it. Like maybe it was the sun on the forehead or genetics. But yeah, don’t UV yourself for a “summer glow,” people are wild.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Are you human? Please solve:Captcha


Secret Link