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Here comes the sun — so protect your skin

Sun­shine. It’s a cru­el irony that one of life’s great­est plea­sures comes attached with such tight strings. Too much sun accel­er­ates lines and wrin­kles and at worst caus­es skin can­cer. Skin can­cer rates show no signs of abat­ing and, accord­ing to the British Skin Foun­da­tion, there are 100,000 new diag­nosed cas­es and 2,500 deaths each year in the UK. That’s sev­en peo­ple a day.

But sun­screen sales are going up. 2013 saw a 3 per cent rise in sales, as report­ed by Euromon­i­tor last August. Peo­ple are going for high­er sun pro­tec­tion fac­tor (SPF) lev­els with SPF 30 to 50 gain­ing ground. So, what’s the prob­lem?

The rec­om­mend­ed amount of sun­screen is a tea­spoon per limb, anoth­er for the face, anoth­er for the front and not for­get­ting the back

The sim­ple answer is most peo­ple still don’t use sun­screen prop­er­ly. Der­ma­tol­o­gist Pro­fes­sor John Hawk says: “In actu­al use they fre­quent­ly only give a sixth to a third or less of the SPF stat­ed on the bot­tle.” At best this trans­lates to just under SPF 7 for those using SPF 20.

The rec­om­mend­ed amount is a tea­spoon per limb, anoth­er for the face, anoth­er for the front and not for­get­ting the back, to match the amount that man­u­fac­tur­ers use when test­ing – 2mg per square cen­time­tre.  Appli­ca­tion should be 20 min­utes before expo­sure, repeat­ed every two hours and after swim­ming.

“Sun­screens must be con­sid­ered the last line of pro­tec­tion, not the first,” says Pro­fes­sor Hawk, point­ing to the need to alter behav­iour in the sun, rather than rely on sun­screen. Loose, tight-weave cloth­ing, a hat and avoid­ing the sun between 11am and 3pm are all rec­om­mend­ed by der­ma­tol­o­gists.

How frequently do you get sunburnt

Mar­co Lens, a plas­tic and recon­struc­tive sur­geon, and skin can­cer expert, adds: “Ultra­vi­o­let or UV light caus­es a cas­cade of chem­i­cal reac­tions in skin cells that lead to DNA dam­age, pro­mot­ing pre­ma­ture skin age­ing and devel­op­ment of skin can­cer.”

Sun­screen remains a vital step in pro­tect­ing skin from UV. Yet of all the prod­ucts along the beau­ty aisles, sun­screen labels are hard to nav­i­gate. Dr Christo­pher Flower, direc­tor-gen­er­al of indus­try body, the Cos­met­ics, Toi­letries & Per­fume Asso­ci­a­tion (CTPA), aims to demys­ti­fy prod­uct labelling for the con­sumer.

His drill for sun­screen is sim­ple. First look for the SPF num­ber which is the indi­ca­tion of the pro­tec­tion of the skin from UVB, the rays that burn. SPF 15 remains the rec­om­mend­ed min­i­mum, increas­ing to 30 and up to 50+ depend­ing on cli­mate and skin type. Next, look for the cir­cled UVA sym­bol to show there’s pro­tec­tion against UVA, the age­ing rays, and con­firms a prod­uct is broad spec­trum. Many sun­screens also car­ry the Boots UVA star rat­ing.

It’s worth know­ing about the con­stituent parts of a sun­screen, espe­cial­ly for those with skin sen­si­tiv­i­ty. There are the organ­ic sun­screens, such as oxy­ben­zone or avoben­zone, which absorb UV rays. Then there are the min­er­al pig­ments, tita­ni­um diox­ide, which sit on the skin reflect­ing rays away. The lat­ter cause least sen­si­tiv­i­ty while the organ­ic sun­screens may irri­tate, “par­tic­u­lar­ly if peo­ple have a slight ten­den­cy to eczema”, says Pro­fes­sor Hawk.

Tita­ni­um diox­ide is usu­al­ly used in its nano form. It is a more effec­tive UV fil­ter in this form, which also improves the cos­met­ic fin­ish, and lessens its white look and sticky feel. The safe­ty of nano tita­ni­um diox­ide is based on sound research. Ultra­sun uses nano tita­ni­um diox­ide. Abi Cleeve, the company’s man­ag­ing direc­tor, says:  “Ultrasun’s use of nanos is at a size that is inde­pen­dent­ly recog­nised – the Ökotest – as unable to pass into the blood­stream, but small enough to leave a great result on the skin.” Ultra­sun SPF 50+ Face com­bines it with antiox­i­dants and ectoin, a nat­ur­al enzyme that pro­tects micro-organ­isms from UV and lasts on the skin for up to two days.

UV rays and their effect on skin

Antiox­i­dants are anoth­er use­ful ingre­di­ent. Their pro­tec­tive, repar­a­tive ben­e­fits are well doc­u­ment­ed and are increas­ing­ly being added to sun­screen for­mu­las. “There are many clin­i­cal stud­ies that have shown adding antiox­i­dants to sun pro­tec­tion for­mu­la­tions can help pre­vent for­ma­tion of free rad­i­cals, and thus reduce pos­si­ble UV dam­age,” says sur­geon and skin can­cer spe­cial­ist Mr Lens.

He has devel­oped this idea with a new antiox­i­dant serum, Zelens Intense Defense, that blocks three dif­fer­ent free rad­i­cals asso­ci­at­ed with UV dam­age and pho­to-age­ing. It is designed to be used under sun­screen. Skinceu­ti­cals was a pio­neer in this field and beau­ty insid­ers wear its high poten­cy anti-age­ing antiox­i­dant serums under sun­screen. Sarah Chap­man Ski­ne­sis Sun Insur­ance SPF 30 is a facial sun­screen with antiox­i­dants.

This year, water resis­tance has improved thanks to a tech­nol­o­gy by Shi­sei­do that har­ness­es water and per­spi­ra­tion on the skin. Its Expert Sun Age­ing Pro­tec­tion line con­tains an ion­ic min­er­al sen­sor in which neg­a­tive ions bond with pos­i­tive ions in water and sweat. The result is a more water-repel­lent lay­er against UV.

In addi­tion to UVA and UVB rays, there’s high-ener­gy vis­i­ble light (HEV) to con­sid­er. Research has shown that it gen­er­ates age­ing free rad­i­cals in the skin dur­ing sun expo­sure. Amer­i­can der­ma­tol­o­gist Dr Zein Oba­gi has intro­duced frac­tion­at­ed melanin, a puri­fied form found in fish and plants, to his sun­screens. It is a puri­fied form of the nat­u­ral­ly occur­ring mol­e­cule. Applied to the skin, it absorbs the poten­tial­ly dam­ag­ing vis­i­ble light wave­lengths, but not the ben­e­fi­cial red ones. ZO Skin Health Oclipse Smart Tone Broad-Spec­trum sun­screens arrive in July with a tint­ed face lotion and a spray for the body, both SPF 50.

And so, the future?  Think wear­able tech­nol­o­gy. French elec­tron­ics com­pa­ny Netat­mo has launched JUNE, a bracelet with an inbuilt UV track­ing device that mea­sures the wearer’s sun expo­sure. It sends per­son­alised noti­fi­ca­tions advis­ing on when to apply sun­screen and at what strength. Then there’s the future of the sun­screen sup­ple­ment. A new study by Ore­gon State Uni­ver­si­ty has iso­lat­ed a chem­i­cal pro­duced by the zebrafish that blocks UV rays, so their ques­tion is why not use it in pill form?  After all, who ever heard of a sun­burnt fish?

 

HOW BRANDS ARE HELPING YOU TO HELP YOURSELF

PREVENTION IS BEST

If diag­nosed ear­ly enough, 90 per cent of melanoma cas­es can be treat­ed effec­tive­ly. Ipsos mar­ket research found that peo­ple are more like­ly to encour­age a loved one to check their skin than do so them­selves. So La Roche-Posay’s Skincheck­er cam­paign aims to encour­age mole-check­ing with a video of two dal­ma­tions and their pups.

SUN SAVVY

As this year’s offi­cial brand for the British Asso­ci­a­tion of Der­ma­tol­o­gists, La Roche-Posay’s video links to the Be Sun Aware web­site where you can find expert advice on moles and sun care, as well as more on the association’s Mole & Sun Advice Road­show.

Underestimating the British sun

APPLICATION KNOW-HOW

A recent Nivea sur­vey high­light­ed the areas or “sun ter­races” we most often for­get to pro­tect. Top of the list were ears, back of neck, shoul­ders and soles of feet. It also found that only 30 per cent would apply sun pro­tec­tion if out in the UK. In response, Nivea’s Take Care Out There YouTube cam­paign aims to encour­age bet­ter sun­screen use with a video show­ing the invis­i­ble effect of UV on the skin with a UV cam­era.

FUND RAISE

Every year sev­en peo­ple in the UK die each day from skin can­cer. The lack of a real cure has inspired the British Skin Foundation’s It Takes Sev­en Skin Can­cer Appeal (#ittakes7). It encour­ages peo­ple to fundraise in teams of sev­en for research into skin can­cer.