Woman Shares Graphic Photo Of Skin Cancer Treatment As A Warning Message
Sometimes a picture really is worth a thousand words.
Tawny Willoughby, a 27-year-old nurse who grew up in a small Kentucky town, shared a photo to Facebook in April ahead of May’s Skin Cancer Awareness Month. The image shows her face after using a cream called Aldara, or imiquimod, to treat skin cancer. The cream is used in lieu of surgery to treat superficial basal cell carcinoma.
“If anyone needs a little motivation to not lay in the tanning bed and sun here ya go!” she wrote. “This is what skin cancer treatment can look like. Wear sunscreen and get a spray tan. You only get one skin and you should take care of it. Learn from other people’s mistakes. Don’t let tanning prevent you from seeing your children grow up. That’s my biggest fear now that I have a two year old little boy of my own.”
In the post, she explained that she was a frequent tanner in high school, using tanning beds four to five times per week. She had her first of six skin cancer diagnoses at 21.
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Posted by Tawny Willoughby on Saturday, April 25, 2015
Posted by Tawny Willoughby on Thursday, September 25, 2014
Skin cancer is the most comment form of cancer in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with melanoma being the deadliest. In 2011, 65,647 people were diagnosed with melanomas of the skin. Skin cancer can be caused by exposure to ultraviolet light, either naturally from the sun or artificially in a tanning bed. Symptoms include a growth, a sore that doesn’t heal or a changing mole.
Willoughby shared the photo, which has almost 60,000 shares, to help spread awareness about the dangers of exposure to UV light.
“I’ve lost count of how many people shared it now and told me I’ve helped them,” she told CNN. “It’s really cool to hear people say they won’t tan anymore. I’ve had mothers thank me after sharing my pictures with their daughters. People in my hometown said they are selling their tanning beds. I never thought about the future when I was in high school; I just tanned because it was normal to me.”
Willoughby did not immediately respond to The Huffington Post’s request for comment.
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Source: Huffington Post Women