Cell Cycleregulation &Cancer Webquest: Activity s1

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Cell Cycleregulation &Cancer Webquest: Activity s1

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Skin Care and Cancer Webquest

You are a doctor fresh out of medical school. You studied dermatology in school, and you are eager to start seeing patients. Because of your excellent grades, you landed a job as a new dermatologist in a well-established doctor’s office. Now you will have to prove yourself as a newbie. You must help at least two of the patients/people from below, by typing the responses.

Directions: Select TWO of the six scenarios below. Access the site, (http://www.chem.purdue.edu/sciexpress/Workshop%20Labs/sunscreen%20-%20Darlene %20and%20Sarah/WebQuestSun2.htm), by searching SUNSCREEN WEQUEST in Google. It is the first link. You must TYPE answers to each question in your scenario. On the website, there are links below each of the scenarios that will give you the information to answer the questions. You may have to share some of your finding in class tomorrow!

SOME OF THE LINKS MAY BE DOWN. IF SO, DO SOME RESEARCH ON YOUR OWN. USE LEGITIMATE, CREDIBLE SOURCES.

Scenario 1 Finding Out About Self Tanners Your patient, a 26 year old woman, hasn’t been able to get in the sun as much as she did as a teenager. She’s very self conscious about her veins in her skin and wants to know what she can do to make her skin look better. She has questions about sunless tanners, including:

1) How do sunless tanners work? 2) Do they change me permanently? 3) What is the chemical involved? 4) Is it safe? 5) What precautions do I have to take when I go to a spray tan place? 6) Will it protect me from sunburn? Will it protect me from cancer? 7) Will it cause cancer? 8) What does SPF mean? 9) Are there different colors for different skin tones? 10) What’s the difference between water-based and oil based tanners?

DHA-Spray and Sunless “Tanning” Booths What’s That Stuff? DHA-Spray Sunless “Tanning” Booths Spray Tanning for Men Skin Cancer Resources How do sunless-tanning products work? Scenario 2 – Holy moley, I’ve got moles Your 9 year old patient, Tim, comes in with his dad. They both have many questions about Tim’s skin.

1) What is the difference between freckles and moles? 2) Are all moles cancer? Will all moles turn into cancer? 3) He has a mole on his eyelid. Will sunglasses keep it from turning into cancer? 4) What causes a mole to turn cancerous? 5) What does my son need to look for if his moles change? 6) Am I born with all the moles I’ll ever get? If not, when will I probably stop getting them? 7) Will my moles ever go away on their own? 8) How can I get rid of them if I don’t like the way they look or feel against my clothes? 9) When I go out, I put on sunscreen right before exposure (so it lasts longer) – but I still get burned. Why is that the case? 10) What does SPF mean?

Moles, Freckles, Skin Tags, Benign Lentigines, and Seborrheic Keratoses Prevention and Early Detection Moles Skin Cancer Resources Scenario 3 – Tell me about tanning beds A teen magazine publisher comes to you for a consultation about tanning beds. She wants to know if she should publish ads for tanning booths. They have presented data showing that it is safer than being in the sun.

1) They say we don’t need to wear goggles because the beds are safe. Is this true? 2) Are they really safer than the sun? How can that be? 3) What causes the tan from the lights (how are the tubes different from household lights)? 4) What are the types of UV radiation? Which is the most dangerous? Why? 5) Students don’t like tan lines. Do those tan-through swimsuits work? 6) Will tanning beds affect the way the students age? 7) Should they use sunscreen in the beds? Is there a preferred type? What does SPF mean? 8) What’s up with the tan accelerators? How do they work? 9) Do they clean the beds or does the UV light kill microbes? 10) If students burn is it different from a sunburn?

Artificial Tanning Booths and Cancer The Tanning Taboo Dying to be Tan Are Teens Dying For a Tan? Indoor Tanning Bad, Docs Say Skin Cancer Resources Scenario 4 – Soccer Mom A very active soccer mom comes to your office. At the age of 45, she has been a lifeguard, is an avid skier, mountain biker and gardener. She noticed the texture of her skin has become less soft. She also has an increase in dark pigmentation on her skin. She is wondering what she can do to improve the overall quality of her skin. 1) Why is my skin different than when I was 17? 2) What are the dark spots? What caused them? 3) I used baby oil as sunscreen when I was younger. What SPF does it have? 4) When I was lifeguard, I had the 3 to 8 shift. Should I have used sunblock then? 5) My son’s a golfer. He’s a redhead with a fair complexion. What do you recommend that he does to protect himself? 6) I’ve heard about those UV blocking shirts. How well do those work? 7) I use face moisturizer with SPF of 15 under my foundation which has an SPF of 18. Is this enough protection for the day? 8) My twin sister (the indoor one) seems to have fewer wrinkles than I do. What is the reason? I’m only out for a half an hour at a time. Does this make a difference? 9) I have been trying to garden more on cloudy days – do I still need to wear sunscreen? 10) What does SPF mean?

Skin Cancer Resources National Coalition for Sun Safety Database UV Beads Video Scenario 5 – Son of the Sun A young man who comes from a family with a history of skin cancer comes to see you for a consultation. His mother has gone in for preventative treatment (PDT) and he is concerned with his predisposition and wonders what actions he can take.

1) What are the three skin cancer types? 2) How are the skin cancers different from each other? 3) What is the most common type of skin cancer and is it the most dangerous? 4) How are the types of skin cancer treated medically? 5) What are the chances of skin cancer reoccurrence? 6) Is there genetic link to any of the cancers? 7) I have been told to monitor any moles on my body. Why is this? What should I look for when it comes to moles (not the chemistry moles or the ones in your yard). 8) Will all of these moles become cancerous? 9) What is the treatment that my mother has gone through? How does it help prevent skin cancer? 10) What does SPF mean?

Prevention and Early Detection Risk Factors Prevention and Early Detection Signs and Symptoms Dark Green Leafy Vegetables and Dark Red Fruits Help Prevent Skin Cancer New Approach Prevents Skin Cancer Using Photodynamic Therapy (PDT) Photodynamic therapy Photodynamic therapy web site Leeds University Skin Cancer – Melanoma: The Facts How Skin Cancer Develops video Skin Cancer Resources Scenario 6 - Baby Fun in the Sun A couple with a new blonde baby girl (2 months old) come in to ask how they can best protect their baby from the sun.

1) Should we use a sunscreen specific to newborns and infants? 2) Are all of the commercial sunscreens available safe for our daughter? 3) We have only SPF 15 at home – could we just apply it three times so that it is equal to SPF 45? 4) Should we put sunglasses on our baby? 5) We had some old sunscreen in the trunk and used it. Did that protect all of us? 6) If our baby gets a severe sunburn, does that affect our baby’s chances of getting skin cancer later in her life? 7) Our daughter constantly is pulling off her hat. Is there a spray of some sort that would protect her scalp? 8) Isn’t the sun good for our skin? 9) Are there types of clothing that we could buy to protect her better when we take her on a walk? 10) If we go to the beach and it is cloudy – does that matter?

Are tanning beds a safe source of Vitamin D? Prevention and Early Detection Keeping Children and Teens Safe Skin Cancer Resources Prevention and Early Detection Risk Factors Certain melanin makes skin more vulnerable to sunburn Sun Safety Sunscreen: Safe for babies? Baby Sun FAQs

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