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Jamie McBride believes bronze is beautiful, and insists she has suffered no negative side effects from using nasal tanners.
A woman who believes “bronze is beautiful” has revealed the secret to her golden glow – snorting fake tan through a nasal spray.
A fear of needles stopped Jamie McBride, 28, who has been having sunbed sessions lasting up to 15 minutes since her teens, from trying tanning
injections – currently illegal and unlicensed in the UK, but available online – which use synthetic hormones to stimulate pigment cells to produce more melanin.
But, two years ago, the stay-at-home mum of Belfast, Northern Ireland, started using a special nasal spray designed to deepen tans – which is similarly banned and unlicensed here – insisting she has not suffered any negative side effects and that her bronzed glow is worth the worry.
She said: “I first found out about nasal tanners when a few friends tried them. They recommended them, since they know I don’t like needles and would never inject myself.
“Like using anything you don’t know much about, putting it into my body does worry me, but everyone else I know who has used them has been okay, so I’ll be fine.
“I feel more beautiful and glowing with a tan, but I hate false tan, the smell of it, and how patchy it goes. With a nice tan, you always feel better – I think everyone can agree on that.”
Before discovering nasal tanners, as soon as she was old enough – 18 under current UK law – Jamie darkened her skin by using sunbeds.
She also used fake tan, although she hated the smell, together with Holland & Barrett Tan Tablets, consisting of PABA, L-Tyrosine and copper, which contribute to normal skin pigmentation.
Initially, hitting the tanning salon for sunbed sessions twice a week, over the years, that increased to three or four times.
“I can now do 15 minutes at a time on the lie down beds, and don’t burn,” she said, although her tanning spray means she has cut back to just one sunbed session a week.
“Between buying nasal sprays and block minutes on the sunbeds, I must have spent a fortune on tanning over the years. I wouldn’t even be able to guess how much.
“It’s not that I feel bad when I’m pale – it’s more I’ll see someone with a lovely tan and think, ‘Oh my god I need to go for a sunbed,’ and think I’m pale when I’m not.”
Around two years ago, after hearing about them through friends, Jamie decided to give nasal tanners – which, like the injections, include a chemical claimed to stimulate melanin production – a go for the first time.
Explaining how they work, she continued: “They come in a small bottle with a nasal spray top. I keep them in the fridge and take one spray up each nostril once a day for a few days to let it build up in my system.
“Then, if I’m having sunbeds too, I’ll up it to two sprays a day – once in the morning, and once before bed.”
She added: “At first, I thought they were giving me headaches, so I stopped using them, but the migraines continued. In the end, it turned out I needed stronger glasses, so I wouldn’t say I have personally had any side effects.”
Like tanning injections, nasal tanning sprays are widely available online, which is where Jamie gets hers for £20-£25 a pop.
At the moment, having just returned from a sunshine holiday in Spain, she is happy with her colour, so does not need to use them, but has vowed to continue when her tan fades.
Remaining defiant in the face of critics, she insists her tanning routine – usually sprays and a once weekly 15 minute sunbed session – is fine.
She said: “In this day and age, everyone has, at some point, used a sunbed or tried a spray or injection, just to see what all the fuss is about.
“If anybody did try to criticise me, I wouldn’t listen anyway, because at the end of the day, it’s my body.”
Jamie concluded: “People are quick to judge, but everyone I know who has tried them loves them, and has had great results. Plus, I haven’t had any side effects that would make me think otherwise.
“As with everything, there is always a risk, so if you feel it isn’t right, then fine – don’t do it.
“But don’t judge others for wanting a tan to feel better about themselves. Everyone has their own opinion, and this is mine.”
A spokesperson for the Government’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) warned against the use of tanning injections and related products containing melanotan.
They said: “Melanotan is not a licensed medicine and therefore its quality and safety has not been tested; no information is held on where or how it is made nor what it contains.
“The fact that it is injected also raises serious questions. Anyone injecting themselves with an unlicensed product is risking their health. It may cause serious and long-term side effects. Our advice is not to use it and if you have used it and suffered side effects, speak to your doctor and report it to us through our Yellow Card Scheme.”