Cancer SocietyTuesday 14 December 2010, 9:51AM
Media release from Cancer Society
Since 2005 Consumer NZ has carried out four mystery-shopper
surveys on sunbed operations.
The latest,carried out in September 2010, shows a pitifully small
improvement on past findings, which comes as no surprise to Dr
Judith Galtry, the Cancer Society's Skin Cancer Advisor.
"Unfortunately New Zealand has a voluntary standard for sunbed
operators. It includes informing clients about the dangers of UV
radiation and providing goggles for eye protection. It also
requires that sunbed operators say "no" to high-risk groups -
especially people with very fair skin, and those under the age of
18.
"A voluntary standard simply isn't legally enforceable. It's up to
the sunbed operators to comply with it and the latest Consumer
survey has found yet again that the majority of operators don't!
How many more such surveys do we need before the Government acts to
regulate the sunbed industry and requires operators to be licensed
as is now the case in most Australian states, as well as in many
other countries with UVR levels that are far lower than our
own?"
Consumer researchers visited 69 sunbed outlets in 13 centres -
including solaria (specialist sunbed establishments), fitness
centres, hairdressers, beauty therapists and nail salons. Only
seven met all the criteria of the voluntary standard Consumer was
evaluating against.
Recent research by the National Institute of Water &
Atmospheric Research (NIWA) looked at UVR levels of New Zealand
sunbeds, as measured by the Ultraviolet Index. It found levels were
high to extreme, with the intensity of radiation at some
wavelengths being several times higher than ever occurs naturally
in midday summer sunlight. NIWA scientist Dr Richard McKenzie
cautioned that people using sunbeds were exposed to unknown
risks.
Last year the International Agency for Research on Cancer - which
is part of the World Health Organization (WHO) - called on all
governments to regulate sunbed use. They say even one sunbed
session before the age of 35 increases the melanoma risk by 75
percent and reclassified sunbeds as a 'group 1' carcinogen (the
same category as cigarettes).