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Women More Likely to Get Tattoos Removed

In the news...(July 22, 2008) - Women are far more likely to want to get tattoos removed than men. The main reasons, the social stigma associated with tattoos and negative comments by others. Those are the finding of a report in the Archives of Dermatology, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.

About one-fourth of adults age 18 to 30 have a tattoo, according to background information in the article.

"While the vast majority of individuals who are tattooed are pleased with their skin markings (up to 83 percent), the popularity and prevalence of tattoos often mean that dermatologists are increasingly hearing stories of regrets and requests for tattoo removal," the authors write. About one-fifth of tattoo wearers are estimated to be dissatisfied with their tattoo, although only about 6 percent seek removal.

Researchers conducted a survey of 196 individuals who visited one of four dermatology clinics for tattoo removal. The 66 men and 130 women (average age 30) answered 127 questions about demographics, obtaining their tattoo and their motivations for seeking removal. Their answers were compared with responses to a similar survey conducted ten years earlier.

"In both studies, a shift in identity occurred, and removal centered around dissociating from the past," the authors write. In the latest study, participants reported they had gotten a tattoo to feel unique (44 percent), independent (33 percent) or to make life experiences stand out (28 percent). The main reasons listed for seeking tattoo removal included:

The survey also found that participants were more likely to be women (69 percent vs. 31 percent men) who were white, single, college-educated and between the ages of 24 and 39. They reported being risk takers, having stable families and were moderately to strongly religious.

While the women were pleased with their tattoos when they got them, they reported changes in their feelings over the following one to five years. "While men also reported some of these same tattoo problems leading to removal, there seemed to be more societal fallout for women with tattoos, as the tattoos began to cause embarrassment, negative comments and clothes problems and no longer satisfied the need for uniqueness," the authors write.

Related Information:

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