With skin cancer rates on the rise for those living in rural and regional areas, Melanoma and Skin Cancer Trials (MASC Trials) and Melanoma Patients Australia have teamed up to launch Self-Skin Checks, No Regrets, an Australian-first campaign to reduce the toll of one of Australia’s deadliest cancers – melanoma.
Self-Skin Checks, No Regrets encourages rural and regional Australians aged 60+ to regularly check their skin for unusual spots, moles, or lesions, and to access the latest resources, patient stories and skin check guides online.
In 2021, an estimated 8,000 Australians in regional areas were diagnosed with melanoma, and this is expected to rise dramatically to over 11,000 annually by 2030.
The campaign is targeting regional and rural communities and particularly men, who are twice as likely than women to die from melanoma. The Cancer Council shows this can be attributed to their attitudes towards the sun and higher levels of sun safety complacency.
Skin cancer can occur at any age, however, many older people living in regional and rural areas have an increased risk of melanoma due to longer unprotected UV radiation exposure and a history of burning during childhood.
Melanoma Patients Australia CEO Victoria Beedle said, “Empowering high risk older Australians in rural and regional areas, with the right knowledge to act early, will help reduce melanoma incidence for this often-forgotten community and significantly improve melanoma survival rates.”