Showing posts with label skin cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label skin cancer. Show all posts

Sunday, April 9, 2017

Cancer Survivor Iraq Veteran Proposes to Survivor Girlfriend

Veteran proposes to girlfriend outside of Schottenstein Center
WCMH News
By NBC4 Staff
Published: April 8, 2017

Beth’s stepmother set the two of them up, Andy said. The two work together in Mansfield. Andy also spent several years in Iraq with the US Army.

COLUMBUS (WCMH) — A local woman got a wonderful surprise when her boyfriend proposed outside the Schottenstein Center on Saturday.
Andy Endicott and Beth Warner have been through a lot in the two years they’ve been together–they were both diagnosed with skin cancer recently and beat it.

Andy got down on one knee outside the Schottenstein Center before the Brantley Gilbert concert on Saturday and asked Beth to marry him.

She nodded, bursting into tears as the people around them applauded.

It’s the first concert Beth has ever been to.

“I’m very surprised,” she said. “I’ve been over the moon that he got tickets for this (the concert).”
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Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans Increased Risk of Skin Cancer

Soldiers returning from combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan at increased risk of skin cancer
News Medical Net
Published on August 4, 2015
"Our study has identified factors that put veterans at risk for skin cancer, including melanoma, but we need to better understand the 'why' of sun protection in the field," Powers said. "There is a suggestion that there are times when the lack of availability was associated with lack of use. Understanding how to provide practical and effective sun protection to servicemen and women in warm climates is the next step.

Soldiers who served in the glaring desert sunlight of Iraq and Afghanistan returned home with an increased risk of skin cancer, due not only to the desert climate, but also a lack of sun protection, Vanderbilt dermatologist Jennifer Powers, M.D., reports in a study published recently in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology.

"The past decade of United States combat missions, including operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, have occurred at a more equatorial latitude than the mean center of the United States population, increasing the potential for ultraviolet irradiance and the development of skin cancer," Powers said.

There were several factors contributing to the increased risk, including not only the desert and more equatorial latitudes, but also the length of sunlight exposure day to day, and, among many service members, a lack of training regarding the dangers of sun exposure and limited access to sunscreen.

For the study, Powers and her colleagues analyzed anonymous survey data from 212 veterans regarding sun exposure and protection during their last deployment.
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