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With cancer diagnoses being retrieved from the Danish Cancer Registry and a survey about tattoo ink exposure from the 2021 ...
Tattoos might also lessen the chances of someone noticing their skin cancer early,, which could then lead to worse outcomes (in this scenario, tattoos wouldn’t be causing cancers, but would be ...
Tattoos appear to increase a person's risk of skin cancer between 33% and 62%, according to a new Danish study in the journal BMC Health. Adobe stock/HealthDay People put a lot of thought into ...
Mellencamp has stage 4 cancer and has had several tumors removed from her body Teddi Mellencamp had to get permission from her doctors before getting her recent tattoos — including the matching ...
A new study found people with tattoos were 21% more likely to develop malignant lymphoma than people without ink.
Using data from more than 5,900 Danish twins, the study, published Jan. 15, found tattoos may increase the risk of skin cancer by 33% to 62%. Tattoos bigger than the palm of a hand put people at ...
The latest study, published in BMC Public Health, probes the link between tattoos and cancer by analysing data from the Danish Twin Tattoo Cohort, containing health information of over 5,900 twins ...
You are reading our weekly Well+Being newsletter. Sign up here to get it delivered to your inbox every Thursday. Happy Thursday! This week, we’re writing about tattoos, cancer and deepening ...
In a U.K.-based survey of breast cancer survivors, 59% of respondents who could see the tattoos on their breastbone after cancer treatment were “never bothered” by them. advertisement.