Transcript SLU - spots

What is SPOTS?
• SPOTS is an interactive program
designed to introduce teenagers
to the importance of sun protection
and its role in skin cancer
Collaborative Project
• Medical Students (SLU & WU)
• Physicians/Nurses
• Statisticians
• School of Public Health
2006-2007 Synopsis
• 40 MD & 1 MPH students were trained
• 1939 secondary students were taught
• 6 middle schools/1 high school
Whose Behind Us?
Saint Louis
University Hospital
Auxiliary
Grand Visions Grant
Recognized in Academia
•AACE Conference: J. of Cancer Education
•Annual city-wide Dermatology Grand
Rounds, WU
•Surgical grand rounds, SLU
•ACP state conference
•Abstracts submitted to the AAD, AAS, and
SSO
•Presenting at National AAD conf in Feb
2008
In the Publics’ Eye…
•The Record (WU newspaper) 01-25-07
http://record.wustl.edu//news/page/normal/8542.h
tml
•The Newsletter (SLU online news), 04-30-07,
“Skin Cancer and Young People”
http://www.slu.edu/x15217.xml
•St. Louis Post Dispatch, Health and Fitness
Section, 05-14-07, “The Dark Side of the Sun.”
News story and SPOTS video was online for
entire summer at Post website.
Why Skin Cancer?
• Melanoma is the 2nd most common
cancer diagnosed in women aged 20-30
• Melanoma is the leading cause of
cancer-related deaths in women
aged 25-30 years in 2005
●
Basal Cell skin cancer comprises
33% of all cancers
Information Taught
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Skin cancer statistics
Visual ID of skin cancers
Myths & Facts
Risk Factors
Preventative methods
Demonstration of sun protection
methods
Demonstration
•
Program
• Part 1: Early Detection
• Part 2: Prevention
Who We Are
• Students in the health professions
• Students interested in educating
teens about sun protection
Part 1
Early Detection
Start with a game
to break the ice
Myth
or
Fact?
MYTH!
Won’t a
“healthy”
tan
protect
my skin?
A Tan:
is your skin’s defensive reaction to radiation
means that your skin has been damaged &
is trying to protect itself with melanin
is limited based on the color of your skin,
hair and eyes (lighter = less protected)
Getting a base tan will prevent
a person from getting a sunburn
MYTH!
A base tan is = SPF of 2
for a skin type II
Lifetime Risk of Getting Melanoma
1935:
1960:
1980:
2002:
1/1500 people
1/800
1/250
1/67
Over a 2000% increase
-Increasing by 3-4% every yearBy 2010 projected to rise to 1/501
Basal Cell Skin Cancer Warning Signs
*
A shiny bump that is pearly in appearance
*
Purple ring is from a marking pen
Squamous Cell Skin Cancer Warning Signs
Open sores that don’t heal within 3-4 wks
Melanoma Warning Signs
●Found on sun-exposed and
non-sun-exposed areas
●70% of skin cancer deaths
●ABC method
●Normal v Abnormal spot
Asymmetry
Normal
Abnormal
Summer Youker, MD
1/2 ≠ other ½ in size or shape
Border
Normal
Abnormal
edges are irregular, scalloped, not round
Color
Abnormal
Normal
more than 1 color
presence of blue, red, blue-black, white
Diameter
Normal
Abnormal
> size of pencil eraser (6mm)
Evolving/Elevation
Daniel Ring, MD
Evolving
Elevation
All pictures are abnormal
Change, especially height
#1 risk factor=change in an existing mole
Change = itches, bleeds, crusts or
changes size, shape or elevation
Estimated relative risk of >400% association in the development of melanoma
Part 2
Prevention
Hands-on demos
How to ID your skin type
● How to choose and use a sunscreen
● Tips for applying self-tanner
● Problem with tanning beds
● UVA/UVB radiation – what’s the big diff?
● Other sun protective methods
such as . . .
●
The Ultraviolet Spectrum
UVA
blocked by atmosphere
10% sun’s rays
90% sun’s rays
▪Aging rays/skin cancer
▪penetrates deeper (dermis)/glass
▪more skin components can absorb UVA
▪no warning sign
▪20 X more reaches earth than UVB
▪tanning bed bulbs
UVB
▪Burning rays/skin cancer
▪penetrates epidermis
but not clouds, glass
▪warning sign = sunburn
NO Indoor Tanning
▪ Bulbs
are 93-98% UVA
2-12 X more UVA than
summer noontime sun
▪ Face
insert - emits
more UVA than the bed
Horizontal bed
Vertical bed
▪ Tanning
indoors adds
30-300% more UVA to
one’s annual solar
exposure
▪ Higher
Inside tanning bed
level tanning
beds emit more radiation in
shorter time period
Skin Analyzer Machine (SAM)
Photos provided courtesy of David H. McDaniel, MD and with permission from the American Academy of Dermatology, all rights reserved.
Photos provided courtesy of David H. McDaniel, MD and with permission from the American Academy of Dermatology, all rights reserved.
Benefits to Teachers
.
• Volunteer in community
• Communicate health risks and guide
behaviors of teens
• Build own knowledge base about skin
cancer
Med students are inconsistently taught to recognize skin cancers
▪ 23% had never observed a skin cancer exam [SCE]
▪ 27% had never been trained to perform an SCE
▪ 43% had never examined a patient for skin cancer
▪ 69% agreed there was insufficient emphasis placed on learning to do
an SCE in their medical training.
▪ This program takes advantage of the fact that teaching a subject is a
profound learning experience and all drs, no matter their specialty,
should be doing SCE’s as a part of their routine H&P.
Moore M, Geller A, Zhang Z, et al. Skin cancer examination teaching in US medical education. Archives of Dermatology, Apr 2006; 142: 439 - 444.
Training sessions
.
• Session #1
• Overview of skin cancer
• presented by a Dermatologist
• Teen behavior basics
• presented by Adolescent Med MD or
PhD in Public Health Professor
• Session #2
• Run-through of SPOTS presentation
• presented by nurse educator
Ready to go…
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PowerPoint Lecture
Lecture script
Training manual
Video
available online at
http://spots.wustl.edu
CITI Certification
The CITI Program is a subscription service providing
ethics education to all members of the research
community. To participate fully, learners must be
affiliated with a CITI participating organization.
1. Go to www.citiprogram.org
Complete biomedical if med
student, social behavioral if
public health student
Due Dec 19
2. Email Steph copy of
completion report sheet
Contacts
Fatima Ali - [email protected]
Kate Leonard - [email protected]
Chad Nelson - [email protected]
Taylor Greenwood- [email protected]