Kategori: Women
Should men give women seats on the tube? Have your say
‘We can have old fashioned etiquette and still have equal pay.’
Sydney Sweeney’s bathwater soap isn’t the empowering move she thinks it is
The whole thing has left me feeling, well, dirty, and all in a lather.
Teachers lock the school loos and only let us go once a day — even on our periods
New research reveals 9% of girls are bullied or teased by teachers about their period.
A stranger questioned my gender – but I’m a biological woman
Maybe I just like my hair short? Whatever he assumed, it’s not his place to judge.
A stranger questioned my gender – but I’m a biological woman
Maybe I just like my hair short? Whatever he assumed, it’s not his place to judge.
Thousands of men are spitting on women runners — it’s happened to me
I uncovered a world of abuse…
Men and women are getting skin cancer on different parts of their bodies

Men and women are developing skin cancer on different parts of their bodies — and our clothing (or lack of it) is to blame.
Blokes across the country might be tempted to ditch their tops at the first sign of sunshine, but 40% of melanomas in men are diagnosed on the torso, according to the latest data, equivalent to around 3,700 cases every year.
In women, the most common location is the lower limbs (from the hips to the feet), equating to around 3,200 cases every year (35% of all cases). The reason? Our love of skirts and shorts, without applying adequate sun cream.
The findings, from Cancer Research UK, come alongside projections that melanoma skin cancer will rise again this year to 21,300 cases across the UK – the highest on record.
Some 87% of melanoma cases – around 17,100 in the UK each year – are caused by over-exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation, which comes from the sun and using sunbeds.
The analysis looked at data from 2018 to 2021, and found the second most common place for men to develop skin cancer is head and neck (24%), arms and shoulders (20%), and lower limbs, including hips (13%).
For women, arms and shoulders come in second, accounting for 27% of cases, while the torso was 22% and head and neck 13%.

Alongside clothing, surface area could also be playing a role, because men’s torsos are typically bigger than women’s, while women’s legs take up a larger proportion of their body surface area.
Since the early 1990s, melanoma skin cancer incidence rates have increased by two-and-a-half times in the UK. Rates in women have around doubled, while they have tripled in men. By 2040, there could be around 26,500 new cases every year.
Signs of Skin Cancer
Common symptoms of skin cancer include a sore or area of skin that:
- Doesn’t heal within 4 weeks
- Looks unusual
- Hurts, is itchy, bleeds, crusts or scabs for more than four weeks
Keep an eye out for changes in moles, ulcers and freckles, and report new lumps or red patches of skin to your doctor.
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web
browser that
supports HTML5
video
Up Next
The main treatment for skin cancer is surgery and the good news is, it’s unusually minor with a high survival rate. But like all cancers, early detection is key. More invasive treatments including radiotherapy and chemotherapy might be needed depending on the type of cancer and if it has spread.
How to reduce your risk of skin cancer
‘Getting sunburnt just once every couple of years can triple your risk of melanoma skin cancer, compared to never being burnt’, says Fiona Osgun, head of health information at Cancer Research UK.
To reduce your risk, you need to be sun safe all year round – not just on holiday or the occasional heatwave.
‘UV rays can be strong enough to cause skin damage between mid-March and mid-October in the UK, even when it’s cloudy or cool,’ Fiona adds.
‘Try to stick to the shade between 11am and 3pm when the sun is strongest, wear clothes that help cover up your skin, with a hat and sunglasses, and use a sunscreen with at least SPF 30 and 4 or 5 stars.
‘The key is to apply it generously – and remember to top it up regularly, especially if you’re sweating or in water.’
I’ve embraced free bleeding when I’m on my period
It’s cheaper, environmentally friendly and so freeing.
I earn £300 a month — this is the reality beyond Clarkson’s Farm
Caitlin might not rake it in, but she’s in her dream job.
Ignore the CEO influencers — not everybody’s cut out to run a business
‘If you’re an entrepreneur, you’re born an entrepreneur.’
I started my period at 11 – heavy bleeding cost me months of school
I missed out on lessons and then spent the next week trying to catch up.
We’re living in the Handmaid’s Tale – Adriana Smith proves it’s true
Adriana Smith is brain dead but being kept alive against her family’s wishes as she is pregnant.
Map reveals the UK cities who have the longest-lasting sex sessions
Locals here are going the distance.
Plastic surgeons share the common cosmetic procedure they’d never get
The mortality rate is so high it has its own autopsy technique.
The four real reasons there are so many virgins in 2025
The reality Virgin Island doesn’t tell you.
Cannes bans naked dresses because people just hate nipples
Cannes Film Festival is banning nudity for ‘decency reasons.’
The one big difference in how men and women like sex to be initiated
This could explain why you’re not always on the same page.
The one phrase that will make your doctor realise there’s something seriously wrong
Who knew it could be so simple?
Coming seventh in a triathlon taught me more than becoming European champion
Women’s maternity rights have only been protected in sport for a few years and even then, the story is mixed.
Bimini: The trans moral panic is escalating – I know what side I’m on
This isn’t just a political debate — it’s about real people and real lives.
My ‘best man’ was a woman – my male friends were shocked
The subtext was clear: this friendship wasn’t normal, something had to be going on.
I want to lose my virginity by the end of the year — I’m fed up of being the odd one out
I lie to people and say I’ve had sex.
I want to lose my virginity by the end of the year — I’m fed up of being the odd one out
I lie to people and say I’ve had sex.
I don’t need to shoplift — but why should a supermarket get all my money?
‘I give myself three for two deals. I’ll pay for two things, and steal one.’
I don’t need to shoplift — but why should a supermarket get all my money?
‘I give myself three for two deals. I’ll pay for two things, and steal one.’