Sun Protection Habits Among Adolescent Athletes
Description
Introduction: Most melanoma cases are directly related to harmful ultraviolet exposure (UV). An adolescent athlete spends close to four hours per day outdoors, which equates to over one thousand hours of sun exposure every year. Athletes are typically unaware that extended periods of UV exposure can cause melanoma and therefore an education regarding sun safety is needed. The Social Cognitive Theory depicts the studied behaviors for this project showcasing external factors that may contribute to an adolescent not using proper sun protection.
Methods: Athletes on the swim team at a Phoenix High School (n=6) were surveyed to determine their current sun protection habits. An education intervention about sun safety and melanoma risk/identification was then implemented. The student athletes were then re-surveyed two weeks post intervention to determine if their sun protection habits and melanoma knowledge had changed. Descriptive statistics were run to compare the pre- and post-survey results.
Results: There was no change between baseline and post-intervention sun safety/melanoma knowledge when descriptive statistics were run. Amongst the six athletes, sun safety habits and knowledge identifying melanoma did not change after the education intervention.
Discussion: Adolescents are unaware of the consequences their lack of safe sun habits can cause on their skin. Most adolescents do not have the proper education from schools or sporting teams to teach them about the dangers of poor sun safety practices. Education alone cannot serve as the sole influence as to whether adolescent athletes increase sun protection habits.
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2022-04-26
Agent
- Author (aut): Ryan, Alexandra
- Thesis advisor (ths): Bay, Sarah
- Contributor (ctb): Arizona State University. College of Nursing & Healthcare Innovation