As Latinos assimilate, sun safety declines according to study
Andreeva and researchers from both USC and the National Cancer Institute (NCI) analyzed the sun-protection habits of nearly 500 Latinos, as reported in the 2005 Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS) administered by the NCI. This included their propensity to use sunscreen, wear protective clothing or seek shade when outside on warm, sunny days.
Depending on the extent of their acculturation – i.e., their length of time in the country and familiarity with the English language – those ranked high in acculturation were less likely to take steps to protect themselves from sun exposure. This, Andreeva says, could be a contributing factor in the growing incidences of melanoma among Latinos in this country.
“Sun-safe behaviors appear similar to other health behaviors which decrease with increasing acculturation,” she says. Latinos who are more acculturated, for example, are at greater risk for substance abuse, certain types of cancer, and poor eating habits.
This was the first study to document how acculturation influences Latinos’ sun-safe behaviors and skin cancer risks. Among the other findings from the study included were observations that Latinas were more inclined to use sunscreen and seek shake than Latinos, who were more likely to use protective clothing. Age and education also play roles, as those who were younger oras well as had higher education levels were also more likely to use sunscreen.
Though Andreeva acknowledges the small sample size as a limitation, she says that the findings could help in developing more effective messages to U.S. Latino populations when it comes to protecting themselves from sun exposure.
“Sun safety messages for less acculturated Latinos could use informal, inexpensive, Spanish-language strategies reinforcing existing sun-safe behaviors,” she says. While “initiatives for highly acculturated Latinos could be similar to those targeted at the general U.S. population and the goal would be behavior modification.”
The study was part of Andreeva’s dissertation research and was done in collaboration with Jennifer Unger, Amy Yaroch, Myles Cockburn and Lourdes Baezcond-Garbanati with the Keck Institute as well as with NCI researchers from the NIH.
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USA Today reported that USC is helping develop a car windshield display technology that would help drivers see better in inclement weather. The system, which would use an ultraviolet laser to project images on the surface of a windshield, is a collaboration among USC, General Motors and Carnegie Mellon University. ZDNet also featured the research.
The Washington Post, in an Associated Press story, featured a case that was taken on by the USC Gould School’s Post-Conviction Justice Project, involving a woman who defenders believe was wrongfully convicted of murder. Gould School student Jennifer Farrell helped to secure the woman’s release by convincing Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to defer to the parole board’s decision to release her. However, the woman, who had been a legal resident at the time of her arrest, was deported to Mexico after being released. The USC legal team will now ask the governor to pardon the woman so she can visit her children in the United States. The Orange County Register also covered the news.
The Washington Post, in an Associated Press story, quoted USC Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and Education Curator Crispin Brooks about the institute’s video archives. The archives, which preserve Holocaust survivor testimony, include 43 records of people who reported seeing Anne Frank in the Bergen Belsen camp, Brooks said.
NBC News’ “NBC Nightly News” featured a project by Donna Spruijt-Metz of the Keck School of USC and Shrikanth Narayanan of the USC Viterbi School that uses text messages and other technology to improve obese Latino teens’ eating and exercise habits. “We’re recruiting technology, which is a part of the obesity problem, to fight obesity,” Spruijt-Metz said. “Cell phones are everywhere. It’s one global device,” Narayanan added.
Central News Agency (Taiwan) reported that USC has signed a memorandum of academic exchange and cooperation with Taiwan’s Ming Chuan University. USC Rossier School Dean Karen Symms Gallagher, who signed the agreement, said that this academic cooperation will allow the two schools to share resources with each other, while enhancing research, teaching quality and competitiveness. USC has been lauded by Time magazine as “University of the Year,” the story noted.
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