
%0 Journal Article
%T Tanning bed burns reported on Twitter: over 15,000 in 2013
%J Translational behavioral medicine
%D 2016
%A Seidenberg, Andrew B.
%A Pagoto, Sherry L.
%A Vickey, Theodore A.
%A Linos, Eleni
%A Wehner, Mackenzie R.
%A Costa, Renata Dalla
%A Geller, Alan C.
%V 6
%N 2
%P 271-276
%X Few surveillance tools exist for monitoring tanning bed injuries. Twitter data were examined to identify and describe reports of tanning bed-caused burns. Tweets sent in 2013 containing keywords for tanning bed use and burning were content analyzed to determine whether a burn caused by a tanning bed was described, and additional data on tanning behavior and burn characteristics were extracted. After content assessment, 15,178 (64 %) tweets were found to describe a tanning bed-caused burn. Sites most reportedly burnt were buttocks (n = 3117), face/head (n = 1020), and chest/breast (n = 546). Alarmingly, 200 burns to the eyes/eyelids were mentioned. A total of 456 tweets described burning >1 time from a tanning bed. A total of 211 tweets mentioned falling asleep inside the tanning bed. In 2013, over 15,000 tweets reported tanning bed-caused burns. Twitter data provides unique insight into tanning behaviors and injuries not captured through traditional public health surveillance.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>
%G en
%I Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group
%@ 1869-6716
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13142-016-0388-6