Examination of the Efficacy of An Appearance-Focused Intervention to Reduce UV Exposure
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-1-2002
Description
This study designed and implemented an appearance-based skin cancer prevention intervention in college-aged females. One hundred and forty-seven respondents were randomly assigned to treatment or control groups. Treatment respondents received a short workbook describing the appearance damaging effects of indoor tanning. At short-term follow-up (2 weeks later) treatment respondents had significantly more negative attitudes toward indoor tanning, and reported fewer intentions to indoor tan. At 2-month follow-up, treatment respondents reported indoor tanning one-half as much as control respondents in the previous 2 months. This appearance-based intervention was able to produce clinically significant changes in indoor tanning use tendencies that could have a beneficial effect on the future development of skin cancer.
Citation Information
Hillhouse, Joel J.; and Turrisi, Rob. 2002. Examination of the Efficacy of An Appearance-Focused Intervention to Reduce UV Exposure. Journal of Behavioral Medicine. Vol.25(4). 395-409. https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1015870516460 PMID: 12136499 ISSN: 0160-7715