After two breast cancer diagnoses, Sierra Susha opens a new tattoo shop and seeks to connect with other young women who face ...
Researchers from the University of Southern Denmark, analyzing data from Danish twin pairs, have found evidence suggesting ...
Your next tattoo might be riskier than currently assumed, recent research suggests. Scientists found evidence of a potential ...
Using a database that tracks the health outcomes of twins, scientists have found more evidence that getting tattoos may be linked to skin cancer. In a new paper published in the journal BMC Public ...
A renowned medical school whose faculty helped treat a young cancer survivor honored this week by President Donald Trump is facing potentially devastating funding cuts because of the White House.
Researchers have found that individuals with tattoos have a higher risk of developing skin cancer and lymphoma compared to their non-tattooed counterparts, especially for larger tattoos.
Kirsty Jackson trained to be able to give realistic 3D tattoos of nipples and areolas for those who had gone to breast cancer A woman is helping change the lives of breast cancer survivors by ...
When Nina Cristinacce was diagnosed with cancer, her life was turned on its head. After successful treatment and a mastectomy, she decided to celebrate her life with a beautiful floral tattoo.
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 ...
Advertisement 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. Results also indicate there's increased ...
How Did the Tattoo-Cancer Study Work? The Departments of Public Health and Clinical Research at the University of Southern Denmark (SDU) teamed up with the University of Helsinki for studies that ...