Relationship between climate change and skin cancer and implications for prevention and management: a scoping review.

Public Health

School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, New South Wales, 2050, Australia. Electronic address:

Published: February 2024

Objectives: This study aimed to explore the published research on the relationship between climate change and skin cancer and the implications for prevention, management and further research.

Study Design: Scoping review.

Methods: This scoping review following JBI methodology reviewed English articles identified in searches of MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, Web of Science and Scopus on 14 April 2023. The screening of articles was completed by two independent reviewers. Data were extracted by a single reviewer and checked by another. A causal pathway diagram was iteratively developed throughout the review and was used to categorise the findings.

Results: The search identified 1376 papers, of which 45 were included in the final review. Nine papers reported primary research, and 36 papers were reviews, perspectives, commentaries, editorials, or essays. The papers examined climate change influencing behaviours related to ultraviolet exposure (30 papers), ambient temperature (21 papers) and air pollution (five papers) as possible risk factors; occupational, rural, and contextual factors affecting skin cancer (11 papers); and prevention and access to health care in the context of climate change (seven papers). Most papers were published in journals in subject areas other than health.

Conclusions: This review identified ultraviolet radiation, occupation, rising temperature, individual behaviour and air pollution as possible influences on skin cancer rates. Furthermore, it highlights the complexity and uncertainties in the relationship between climate change and skin cancer and the need for further research on this relationship, including primary epidemiological research and reviews that follow recognised review guidelines and include assessment of health services and social determinants in the causal pathways of this relationship.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.puhe.2023.12.003DOI Listing

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