Medical students educate teens about skin cancer: What have we learned?

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Abstract

Skin cancer is a serious societal problem, and public awareness outreach, including to youth, is crucial. Medical students have joined forces to educate adolescents about skin cancer with significant impacts; even one 50-min interactive outreach session led to sustained changes in knowledge and behavior in a cohort of 1,200 adolescents surveyed. Medical students can act as a tremendous asset to health awareness public outreach efforts: enthusiastic volunteerism keeps education cost-effective, results in exponential spread of information, reinforces knowledge and communication skills of future physicians, and can result in tangible, life-saving benefits such as early detection of melanoma. © The Author(s) 2010.

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Kamell, J. M., Rietkerk, W., Lam, K., Phillips, J. M., Wu, J. J., McCullough, J. L., … Osann, K. (2011). Medical students educate teens about skin cancer: What have we learned? In Journal of Cancer Education (Vol. 26, pp. 153–155). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13187-010-0120-z

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