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Scientist: Don't Trust Sunscreen
The latest skin-cancer prevention advice is to stop trusting sunscreen as the front line of defense against harmful rays.
Instead, wear sunblocking clothing or stay out of the sun altogether, experts say.
Sunscreen has been shown to protect against UV skin damage as well as basal carcinomas and squamous cell carcinoma—two of the three most common skin cancers. However, it has not been conclusively shown to protect against melanoma , the most fatal kind, said Stephan Lautenschlager of the Outpatient Clinic of Dermatology at Triemli Hospital in Switzerland.
Lautenschlager and his colleagues carried out a comprehensive review on sun protection strategies worldwide, recently detailed online in the journal Lancet.
"Wearing sun-protective clothing and a hat and reducing sun exposure to a minimum should be preferred to sunscreens," Lautenschlager said. People tend to sunbathe for social reasons, he said. "Nevertheless, sunscreens should not be abused in an attempt to increase time in the sun to a maximum."
No wet T-shirts
The best clothing for sun protection is tightly woven, thick garments made of denim, wool or polyester, not cotton, linen or acetate, he said. Dry material or clothes that have shrunk after washing are denser and better at blocking UV rays than wet, stretched or bleached clothing.
Outdoors, wear sunscreen and lots of it. Zinc or titanium oxide sunscreens scatter UV light and yield fewer allergies, so they are better for children, he said. The more common sunscreen lotions, called organic sunscreens, absorb UV rays.
"The application of a liberal quantity of sunscreen is by far the most important factor for effectiveness of the sunscreen, followed by the uniformity of application and the specific absorption spectrum of the agent used," Lautenschlager said.
That is, don't treat the stuff like liquid gold. Smear it on. A shot glass-full should be applied 15 to 30 minutes before heading outdoors.
snip...
More than 1 million new cases of skin cancer will be diagnosed this year, the AAD says, but when detected early, even melanoma is highly treatable.
To check yourself, regular inspect all your skin, including the back, scalp, buttocks, soles of the feet, between the toes and the palms of the hands. Use mirrors when necessary.
Other tips from the AAD: Seek shade if you must be outdoors during the sun's strongest hours, between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Avoid tanning beds. Their UV light causes skin cancer and wrinkling. Use a self-tanning lotion if you want to look tanned.
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Don't Trust the Sunscreen
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Sunbathers: Beware the A-ray
By Jessica Marshall
The New Scientist
27 June 2007 Issue
Summer is here, at least for those of us on the top of half the world. It's time to dump the coats, bare the shoulders and bring on the barbecues, time for days at the beach, outdoor sports and fun in the sun. And thanks to the miracle of modern chemistry known as sunscreen, we can spend hours under the sun without worrying about the consequences.
Or can we? The incidence of the most deadly form of skin cancer, melanoma, is increasing faster than that of any other cancer, doubling every one or two decades in countries such as the US, UK and Australia. There's no doubt that more people exposing more skin to the sun more often is the underlying reason behind the huge rise since the 1950s. Yet when epidemiologists began to look at the effects of sunscreens in the 1990s, they found no evidence that these creams and lotions were reducing the impact of our love of sunshine by protecting us from melanoma.
How is this possible? While sunburn is mostly caused by the part of the ultraviolet spectrum known as UVB, there's growing evidence linking melanomas to UVA. Older sunscreens allowed people to stay out in the sun longer without burning but provided little protection against UVA, so they increased people's exposure to these wavelengths.
If UVA really is responsible for melanoma, a whole generation may have been misled into thinking sunscreens allowed them to soak up the rays with impunity.
The rest
By Jessica Marshall
The New Scientist
27 June 2007 Issue
Summer is here, at least for those of us on the top of half the world. It's time to dump the coats, bare the shoulders and bring on the barbecues, time for days at the beach, outdoor sports and fun in the sun. And thanks to the miracle of modern chemistry known as sunscreen, we can spend hours under the sun without worrying about the consequences.
Or can we? The incidence of the most deadly form of skin cancer, melanoma, is increasing faster than that of any other cancer, doubling every one or two decades in countries such as the US, UK and Australia. There's no doubt that more people exposing more skin to the sun more often is the underlying reason behind the huge rise since the 1950s. Yet when epidemiologists began to look at the effects of sunscreens in the 1990s, they found no evidence that these creams and lotions were reducing the impact of our love of sunshine by protecting us from melanoma.
How is this possible? While sunburn is mostly caused by the part of the ultraviolet spectrum known as UVB, there's growing evidence linking melanomas to UVA. Older sunscreens allowed people to stay out in the sun longer without burning but provided little protection against UVA, so they increased people's exposure to these wavelengths.
If UVA really is responsible for melanoma, a whole generation may have been misled into thinking sunscreens allowed them to soak up the rays with impunity.
The rest
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