Health

The free, life-saving app you need to download right now

It can spot skin cancer within 20 seconds.
Women with a suspicious-looking mole.

Did you know that two out of every three Australians will be diagnosed with skin cancer by the time they’re 70 years old?

This shocking statistic serves as a harsh reminder that not only is it important to be sun safe this summer, but to also get regular skin checks not only from a skin specialist or your GP, but as of this year, a revolutionary new melanoma detection app.

The SkinVision app allows people to take pictures of their suspicious-looking spots, and then the app will analyse it, before giving you an instant risk assessment (if the spot ranks high, you’re advised to visit a skin specialist immediately).

The other top feature of this app is the ability for it to track changes of any mole; just save the first picture of a spot you have analysed and then share this picture with your doctor every time you get a routine skin check.

The brilliance of this app has already saved the life of Marie Stantiall, a New Zealand woman who received a high-alert notification after uploading a picture of a dark spot on her leg to the app.

“When I went to my doctor, she removed it straight away and she noticed another lesion near my collarbone and removed that too,” Marie told the New Zealand Herald.

The SkinVision app is available for free in Australia on both iTunes and Google Play.

No person should solely rely on this app; it’s important to book in regular skin checks with a skin cancer specialist.

Related stories

Hugh Jackman posted about his cancer on Instagram.
Health

Hugh Jackman treated for skin cancer

The 45-year-old actor posted a picture of his bandaged nose on his Instagram account last night, saying he had gone to the doctor at his wife Deborra-Lee Furness’ urging. “Deb said to get the mark on my nose checked,” he wrote. “Boy was she right!” Hugh’s “mark” was reportedly a basal cell carcinoma that had […]