Department of Pediatrics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.
Department of Epidemiology and Community Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States.
JMIR Dermatol. 2021 May 19;4(1):e25661. doi: 10.2196/25661.
Indoor ultraviolet (UV) tanning is common and consequential, increasing the risk for cancers including melanoma and basal cell carcinoma. At-risk groups include adolescents and young adults, who often report beliefs about benefits of tanning. Adolescent and young adults are also among the most ubiquitous social media users. As previous studies support that content about tanning is common on social media, this may be a way that young women are exposed to influential content promoting tanning, including health misinformation.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate health misinformation promoted by indoor tanning businesses via social media and to understand young women's perceptions of this misinformation.
This mixed methods study included (1) retrospective observational content analysis of indoor tanning salons' content on Facebook over 1 year and (2) qualitative interviews with a purposeful national sample of 46 White non-Hispanic women, age 16 to 23 years, who had recently tanned indoors. We assessed experiences with tanning businesses' posted content on social media through interviews. We used the constant comparative approach for qualitative analyses.
Content analysis findings included data from indoor tanning businesses (n=147) across 50 states, yielding 4956 total posts. Among 9 health misinformation topics identified, the most common was the promotion of UV tanning as a safe way to get Vitamin D (n=73, 1.5%). An example post was "Stop by Body and Sol to get your daily dose of Vitamin D." Another misinformation topic was promoting tanning for health benefits (n=31, 0.62%), an example post was "the flu is not a season, it's an inability to adapt due to decreased sun exposure…" A total of 46 participants completed interviews (age: mean 20 years, SD 2). Almost all participants (45/46, 98%) used Facebook, and 43.5% (20/46) followed an indoor tanning business on social media. Approximately half of participants reported seeing social media posts from tanning salons about Vitamin D, an example of a participant comment was "I have [seen that] a few times..." Among the participants, approximately half believed it was safe to get Vitamin D from indoor UV tanning; a participant stated: "I think it is a valid benefit to UV tanning."
Despite the low frequency (range 0.5%-1.5%) of social media posts promoting health misinformation, participants commonly reported viewing these posts, and their perceptions aligned with health misinformation. Health education campaigns, possibly using social media to target at-risk populations, may be an innovative approach for tanning prevention messages.
室内紫外线 (UV) 晒黑很常见,也会带来后果,增加了包括黑色素瘤和基底细胞癌在内的癌症风险。高危人群包括青少年和年轻人,他们经常报告有关晒黑益处的信念。青少年和年轻人也是最普遍的社交媒体用户之一。由于之前的研究支持社交媒体上经常出现有关晒黑的内容,因此这可能是年轻女性接触到宣传晒黑的有影响力内容(包括健康错误信息)的一种方式。
本研究的目的是评估室内晒黑沙龙通过社交媒体推广的健康错误信息,并了解年轻女性对这些错误信息的看法。
这项混合方法研究包括(1)对室内晒黑沙龙在 Facebook 上发布的内容进行为期一年的回顾性观察性内容分析,以及(2)对 46 名年龄在 16 至 23 岁之间、最近曾在室内晒黑的白种非西班牙裔女性进行的有针对性的全国性样本的定性访谈。我们通过访谈评估了她们在社交媒体上接触到的晒黑业务发布内容的经历。我们使用恒定性比较方法进行定性分析。
内容分析结果包括来自全美 50 个州的室内晒黑业务的数据(n=147),共产生了 4956 条总帖。在确定的 9 个健康错误信息主题中,最常见的是推广 UV 晒黑作为获得维生素 D 的安全方式(n=73,1.5%)。一个例子是“到 Body and Sol 去获取你每日所需的维生素 D。”另一个错误信息主题是宣传晒黑对健康有益(n=31,0.62%),一个例子是“流感不是一个季节,而是由于太阳照射减少而导致的无法适应……”共有 46 名参与者完成了访谈(年龄:平均 20 岁,标准差 2)。几乎所有参与者(45/46,98%)都使用 Facebook,其中 43.5%(20/46)在社交媒体上关注室内晒黑业务。大约一半的参与者报告看到过沙龙有关维生素 D 的社交媒体帖子,一位参与者评论说:“我已经看到过几次……”在参与者中,大约一半的人认为从室内 UV 晒黑中获得维生素 D 是安全的;一位参与者表示:“我认为 UV 晒黑有这种好处。”
尽管社交媒体上宣传健康错误信息的帖子频率较低(范围为 0.5%-1.5%),但参与者普遍报告看到过这些帖子,并且他们的看法与健康错误信息一致。健康教育活动,可能使用社交媒体针对高危人群,可能是晒黑预防信息的一种创新方法。