Oregon Looks To Ban Minors From Tanning Beds, Reduce Skin Cancer

Oregon Legislature Looks To Ban Minors From Tanning Beds To Reduce Skin Cancer Risks

Across the nation, lawmakers are debating where to draw the line on young teen tanning, considering proposals that would make it illegal to expose minors to ultraviolet rays from sunlamps.
Those who support such a ban say the need is obvious. “Tanning booths, like cigarettes, cause cancer and should be off-limits to teenagers,” said Dr. Brian Druker, the director of the Oregon Health and Science University’s Knight Cancer Institute.
Opponents characterize such legislation as an overreaction to an exaggerated danger. “The proponents have overstated the risks,” said Joseph Levy, the scientific adviser for the American Suntanning Association, who testified recently before Oregon lawmakers.
The arguments in the often drab and overcast Pacific Northwestern state mirror national discussions on the issue, as lawmakers in 25 other states consider bills that would introduce or tighten restrictions on young people tanning, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
The pending legislation is in various stages around the U.S. and only a handful of bills have advanced out of their original chambers, the NCSL said. However, the broad sweep reflects what tanning opponents consider momentum just a year after California and Vermont became the first states to completely ban minors from using indoor sun booths.
More than 30 states regulate indoor tanning for minors with provisions calling for minimum-ages and

Read the rest of this article on Washington Post: Oregon Legislature looks to ban minors from tanning beds, reduce skin cancer risks

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