Skin and Hispanic skin cancer risks
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In English | For years, Yvonne Basil did not give importance to that little dark mark that he had on the fifth right foot.She didn't worry when the brand began to change and grow under the nail.After all, she didn't feel pain.However, when Basil, 54, had some funds in her flexible expense account that would be lost if she did not use them, she decided to be examined by a doctor."I thought I would use my flexible expenses account to consult with undermatologist because I didn't want to lose that money that was available," she says.
Basil made an appointment with Dr. Seemal R. Desai, a flat dermatologist, Texas, and former president of the Skin of Color Society.Almost as soon as he began the exam, the doctor's expression revealed that it was something serious."Dr. Desai seemed to have seen a ghost," Basil recalls.He "said immediately:" It's melanoma. "
Being a black woman who spent a short time to the sun, Basil never believed that skin cancer was a concern for people like her.In fact, basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma and melanoma - the three main types of skin cancer - are much more frequent in white people.However, according to Basil, people of color also run risk.