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Health, risk and sunbed use : a qualitative study.

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Health, risk and sunbed use : a qualitative study. / Murray, Craig; Turner, Elizabeth.
In: Health, Risk and Society, Vol. 6, No. 1, 03.2004, p. 67-80.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Murray, C & Turner, E 2004, 'Health, risk and sunbed use : a qualitative study.', Health, Risk and Society, vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 67-80. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369857042000193039

APA

Vancouver

Murray C, Turner E. Health, risk and sunbed use : a qualitative study. Health, Risk and Society. 2004 Mar;6(1):67-80. doi: 10.1080/1369857042000193039

Author

Murray, Craig ; Turner, Elizabeth. / Health, risk and sunbed use : a qualitative study. In: Health, Risk and Society. 2004 ; Vol. 6, No. 1. pp. 67-80.

Bibtex

@article{8e144cc1e58a4c70b7d89306a9680f74,
title = "Health, risk and sunbed use : a qualitative study.",
abstract = "A large body of quantitative research has addressed people{\textquoteright}s sunbathing and artificial tanning behaviour although to date there has not been any qualitative studies on these topics. This study seeks to extend what is known about sunbed use from prior statistically based research by taking a qualitative approach to explore the reasoning which underpins sunbed use. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with 18 (nine male and nine female) sunbed users. Interviews transcripts underwent Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis, which resulted in the emergence of five themes. These themes revealed varied reasons why participants began using a sunbed. However, continued use was found to be mainly due to a feeling that it enhanced the way participants looked, despite all participants acknowledging that the tan a sunbed produces is not necessarily healthy and carries the risk of skin cancer. Three findings are of particular note: a varied peer element to engaging in and maintaining sunbed use is consistently related by participants; many experienced their tanning behaviour as addictive; and participants were more concerned about the possible aging effects of artificial tanning than the risk of skin cancer. The emergent themes are discussed and compared in the light of previous research, and in terms of theory on {\textquoteleft}risk{\textquoteright}.",
keywords = "interpretative phenomenological analysis, qualitative, sunbed, tanning",
author = "Craig Murray and Elizabeth Turner",
year = "2004",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1080/1369857042000193039",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
pages = "67--80",
journal = "Health, Risk and Society",
issn = "1369-8575",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Health, risk and sunbed use : a qualitative study.

AU - Murray, Craig

AU - Turner, Elizabeth

PY - 2004/3

Y1 - 2004/3

N2 - A large body of quantitative research has addressed people’s sunbathing and artificial tanning behaviour although to date there has not been any qualitative studies on these topics. This study seeks to extend what is known about sunbed use from prior statistically based research by taking a qualitative approach to explore the reasoning which underpins sunbed use. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with 18 (nine male and nine female) sunbed users. Interviews transcripts underwent Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis, which resulted in the emergence of five themes. These themes revealed varied reasons why participants began using a sunbed. However, continued use was found to be mainly due to a feeling that it enhanced the way participants looked, despite all participants acknowledging that the tan a sunbed produces is not necessarily healthy and carries the risk of skin cancer. Three findings are of particular note: a varied peer element to engaging in and maintaining sunbed use is consistently related by participants; many experienced their tanning behaviour as addictive; and participants were more concerned about the possible aging effects of artificial tanning than the risk of skin cancer. The emergent themes are discussed and compared in the light of previous research, and in terms of theory on ‘risk’.

AB - A large body of quantitative research has addressed people’s sunbathing and artificial tanning behaviour although to date there has not been any qualitative studies on these topics. This study seeks to extend what is known about sunbed use from prior statistically based research by taking a qualitative approach to explore the reasoning which underpins sunbed use. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with 18 (nine male and nine female) sunbed users. Interviews transcripts underwent Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis, which resulted in the emergence of five themes. These themes revealed varied reasons why participants began using a sunbed. However, continued use was found to be mainly due to a feeling that it enhanced the way participants looked, despite all participants acknowledging that the tan a sunbed produces is not necessarily healthy and carries the risk of skin cancer. Three findings are of particular note: a varied peer element to engaging in and maintaining sunbed use is consistently related by participants; many experienced their tanning behaviour as addictive; and participants were more concerned about the possible aging effects of artificial tanning than the risk of skin cancer. The emergent themes are discussed and compared in the light of previous research, and in terms of theory on ‘risk’.

KW - interpretative phenomenological analysis

KW - qualitative

KW - sunbed

KW - tanning

U2 - 10.1080/1369857042000193039

DO - 10.1080/1369857042000193039

M3 - Journal article

VL - 6

SP - 67

EP - 80

JO - Health, Risk and Society

JF - Health, Risk and Society

SN - 1369-8575

IS - 1

ER -