Quantcast
Home manage Las Vegas Review-Journal
  Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo   Search:

RECENT EDITIONS
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

sponsored by
News


Cancer survivor is on a mission

Woman seeks law on tanning booths

CARSON CITY -- As a teen in Southern California, Stacey Escalante was obsessed with getting the perfect tan.

"I went to the beach all the time," said Escalante, a former reporter for KVBC-TV, Channel 3, who is now a Las Vegas public relations executive. "I fried my skin with baby oil."


Most Popular Stories
  • TRAFFIC STOP: Shooting accounts conflict
  • Man shot by police identified as local attorney
  • NORM: At time, drug use wasn't suspected
  • One motorcyclist killed, another critically injured in accident
  • Nurseries fence out day laborers
  • NORM: Marie Osmond, manager battling
  • Second person dies after being restrained by police
  • Boy struck, killed by car pulling out of driveway
  • Three children fall from vehicle; mothers arrested
  • REFUSING THEIR OWN MEDICINE: Vaccination policy spurs legal action




  • Soon she started to frequent tanning booths. When she moved to Southern Nevada in 1997, she couldn't stand frying in the 110 degree heat, so she hit the tanning booth at least once a week.

    Escalante, 37, paid the price. In June 2005, doctors diagnosed a small mole on her back as a Stage 3 malignant melanoma tumor.

    Then came two surgeries, daily shots and frequent scans. She was flat on her back for seven weeks. The hardest part was that she could not care for her two young children.

    Today, Escalante has been cancer-free for two years. She ran a marathon this year and intends to run soon in the Las Vegas Marathon.

    If she could have one wish, Escalante would want the state Legislature to reverse what it did in 2007 and prevent young people from making the same mistake she did.

    She wants a state law forbidding young people from using tanning booths.

    The stage has been set. Assemblywoman Ellen Koivisto, D-Las Vegas, said Tuesday that she will again sponsor a bill to regulate the use of tanning booths and prevent those under age 16 from using them.

    Despite testimony from Escalante and dermatologists during the 2007 session, Republicans banded together and killed a similar bill by Koivisto. The bill passed, 26-16, but needed a two-thirds majority because it included a fee to set up the state Board of Cosmetology to regulate the tanning industry.

    This time, Koivisto figures she'll have better luck by floating two versions of her bill. One would regulate the tanning industry through a board.

    But if the fee would jeopardize that bill, Koivisto will offer a version that blocks children younger than 16 from using tanning booths and requires parental permission for 16- and 17-year-olds. Such legislation should not need a fee, she said, since the tanning businesses would be responsible for self-regulation.

    Assembly Minority Leader Heidi Gansert, R-Reno, said she still opposes setting age limits on the use of tanning booths. Gansert, the wife of a physician, said she and other Republicans feel such decisions are best left to individuals.

    "It is about choice," she said. "Parents should decide what their children should and should not do. It should not be the responsibility of the Legislature."

    That said, Gansert, the mother of four, called herself a "sunscreen person."

    The Indoor Tanning Association employed a lobbyist at the 2007 Legislature who did not publicly oppose Koivisto's bill but proposed many changes.

    Sarah Longwell, a spokeswoman for the association, said science doesn't bear out dermatologists' view that moderate exposure to ultraviolet rays is harmful.

    She said moderate exposure to UV rays in tanning booths stimulates production of Vitamin D, which protects the heart and can help ward off certain types of cancer.

    The danger comes with extremely heavy use of tanning booths and suntanning that causes burns, Longwell said. Tanning salons that are members of the association take steps to limit the use of tanning booths so that users are not overexposed to UV rays, Longwell added.

    Melanoma most likely is caused by genetics, not moderate exposure to light in tanning booths, she said.

    But Koivisto said she suffered from non-malignant basal cell cancer and is concerned because statistics show 1 million Americans each year have some form of skin cancer. Twenty-six states have laws preventing people younger than 18 from using tanning booths.

    Koivisto said young women, in particular, too often become regular users of tanning salons without being fully aware of the potential consequences.

    "Kids now can just go into health clubs and use the tanning booths as much as they want," she said.

    According to the National Cancer Institute, almost everyone who uses a tanning booth is at risk for skin cancer. The ultraviolet light in the booths thins the skin, making it less able to heal. Light sources in tanning booths are two to three times more powerful than natural sunlight, the institute says.

    It advises people to never use tanning booths and says women who use them more than once a month are 55 percent more likely to develop malignant melanoma, the most deadly skin cancer.

    Escalante now speaks regularly at high school gatherings about her experience. Although the media regularly carry stories about the potential hazards, she said, too many students, particularly girls, have not gotten the message.

    She says she feels gratified when women tell her they gave up tanning booths after hearing her speak.

    There is a 30 percent chance her cancer will return.

    "I am a pretty positive person," said Escalante, who gave up her TV career to spend more time with her children. "I am a changed person. But I am not out of the woods yet."

    Contact reporter Ed Vogel at evogel @reviewjournal.com or 775-687-3901.

    Newsvine Digg Fark Technorati reddit StumbleUpon del.icio.us Slashdot Propeller Mixx Furl Twitter MySpace Facebook Google Bookmarks Yahoo! Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites Ask MyStuff myAOL Favorites

    Leave Your Comment 15 Reader Comments
    Terms & Conditions
    The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

    Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
    Current Word Count:

    Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

    Report abuse

    snow*flake wrote on October 29, 2008 05:49 PM: While it saddens me to hear about anyone with cancer, I do not agree that legislation is the answer. Education is the more direct route. Also, loving oneself as one is rather than jumping through hoops might be a better message to send than legislating what one can and cannot do for the sake of vanity. People get surgery for vanity and all surgery carries a risk. For example, you could die from complications.

    I have been in and out of Nevada since 1977 and I was never one to sit out in the sun here or any where else for that matter. I was educated at an early age by a wise parent who admomished me to stay out of the sun. I have always worn hats, sun protective make up and nowadays, I use organic skin care products and slather on the SPF 50 +.

    There is also sun protective clothing. I have two long sleeved shirts made by Columbia with an SPF of 50. I have two hats with an SPF of 50 also. Maybe I am going to extremes, but one's skin is an organ and like all other organs one must do what is healthy. We all need a little sunlight for vitamin D. I mean, you have to live your life so getting sun is part of it.


    Report abuse

    MGH wrote on October 29, 2008 05:24 PM: fACE IT LADY YOU OVER DID IT. YOU FAMILY LIKE MINE HAS THIS WITHIN THE FAMILY. JUST CAUSE YOU NO LONGER WISH TO USE TANNING BEDS. PLEASE DO NOT SPEAK FOR ME. I WILL MAKE THAT CHOICE AS I MAKE MY CHOICES IN LIFE NOT YOU. ALSO, YOU CHOOSE TO DIRECT THIS TO ONLY PEOPLE UNDER THE AGE OF 16. WELL LET ME TELL YOU SOMETHING LADY. IF i KILL SOMEONE MY AGE THEN HAS NO BEARING ON WHAT I DID. I WILL BE TRIED AND HUNG OUT TO DRY JUST LIKE AN ADULT WOULD BE. GET A LIFE WILL YA. MORON


    Report abuse

    Been there wrote on October 29, 2008 04:23 PM: John,

    With all due respect, and being from California too, I was told the booths were safer than the sun. If I had the foresight 20 years ago I would have heeded my dermatologist's warning that the booth rays are more concentrated. Whether they are UVA or UVB. And you are right, one visit a week is nothing. I am not complaining or whining - I got what I deserved. And I will tell you I had an AWESOME tan. It just cost me a lot more that I expected. I a price I wouldn't pay today if I had known. You know what they say about too much of anything...


    Report abuse

    Dave wrote on October 29, 2008 03:08 PM: We must thank Stacey. If nothing else, she brings the issue to light.


    Report abuse

    PROC wrote on October 29, 2008 02:19 PM: People from the Peoples Republic of California like to ban things. This one is funny though. They should be careful. If they ban Sunlight, it might not be 80 degrees year round there. So they should just ban radiation. We like to joke that during the fires, PROC'ers try to ban fire. One wise PROCer suggested that since fire had protected class status, that they ban wind!


    Report abuse

    John wrote on October 29, 2008 02:10 PM: "I went to the beach all the time," said Escalante, a former reporter for KVBC-TV, Channel 3, who is now a Las Vegas public relations executive. "I fried my skin with baby oil."

    Once visit per week to a tanning salon is not over-exposing your self to UV rays. If anything this cancer was a result of genetics and as Escalante stated, frying on the beach.

    How did her poor judgement on the beach become an indoor tanning issue?


    Report abuse

    BAH wrote on October 29, 2008 01:59 PM: Since you can't FIX the stupid, you wanna legislate the sensible?

    F*ck you very much!


    Report abuse

    Jeff S wrote on October 29, 2008 01:59 PM: Good idea. Let's make it illegal for people 16 & under to use tanning beds. Then, when they can't go to the tanning salon, they'll sit outside and tan in the sunlight, the old-fashioned way. Then, when someone does that too much and gets skin cancer, we can make sun-tanning illegal, too.

    When does it end? Let people make their choice and be accountable for it.


    Report abuse

    Melanoma Survivor wrote on October 29, 2008 01:48 PM: I too am a melanoma survivor and wish that someone would have stopped me from using tanning booths in high school. I was diagnosed while pregnant in 2005 and I wish that no person go through the worry and fear as I did as a new parent. People under the age of 18 are not of age for a reason, and parents should need to give consent if they want their teen to tan. I commend Stacey Escalante for taking on the State of Nevada and for educating the public on the dangers of tanning.


    Report abuse

    Been there wrote on October 29, 2008 01:29 PM: Vanity is a funny, twisted thing. I, too, am a product of melanoma from tanning beds. I was diagnosed in 1988 - the mole was very small, but it turns out it was Stage 4 and it was VERY deep... They told me they got it all after they removed all the skin and tissue from my entire shoulder down to the muscle. But, it was too late, it had already spread even though they said the second biopsy was clear. It spread to my lymph glands in less than a year. The scars are not pretty and there are many. Skin grafts and 5 years of injections with an experimental melanoma vaccine saved my life.(Thank you Dr. Donald Morton!) We make choices, and then have to live with them. I should not be here to write this - at least that was I was told at the John Wayne Cancer Clinic in Santa Monica. It wasn't a fun time in my life - but it sure put things in perspective. You can put as many warnings as you want on things and they will always be ignored. Stacey is just trying to be a voice of experience. To keep one person from going through what we did - she will have accomplished her mission.


    Read All Comments