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Best Sunscreen for Summer

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Wondering what to wear this summer? Get the latest facts before you buy your next sunscreen.

By R. Morgan Griffin
WebMD Feature
Reviewed by Brunilda Nazario, MD

Choosing a sunscreen isn't as simple as it used to be.

The next generation of sunscreens is just hitting the market -- including L'Oreal's Anthelios SX and products containing Helioplex -- designed to offer fuller protection against both UVA and UVB rays. Given all the new options, how do you know which is the best sunscreen for you?

"For most people, trying to compare one sunscreen to another can be complicated, " says David J. Leffell, MD, professor of dermatology and surgery at the Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Conn.

While choosing the best sunscreen is important, perhaps even more crucial is using it correctly -- something a lot of us don't do, says Henry W. Lim, MD, chair of the department of dermatology at the Henry Ford Medical Center in Detroit. So before you plop down on the lawn chair -- or take the kids to the beach -- here are the sunscreen facts.

Finding the Best Sunscreen

Sunscreens help shield you from the sun's dangerous ultraviolet (UV) rays in two ways. Some work by scattering the light, reflecting it away from your body. Others absorb the UV rays before they reach your skin.

A few years ago, choosing a good sunscreen meant you just looked for a high sun protection factor (SPF) -- which rates how well the sunscreen protects against one type of cancer-causing UV ray, ultraviolet B (UVB.) "SPF refers to blockage of UVB rays only," says Leffell.

Research soon showed that ultraviolet A rays (UVA) also increase skin cancer risk. While UVA rays don't cause sunburn, they penetrate deeply into skin and cause wrinkles. The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that up to 90% of skin changes associated with aging are really caused by a lifetime's exposure to UVA rays.

The New Broad-Spectrum Sunscreens

So which is the best sunscreen for you? Clearly, you'll want a sunscreen with "broad-spectrum" or "multi-spectrum" protection for both UVB and UVA. Ingredients with broad-spectrum protection include benzophenones (oxybenzone), cinnamates (octylmethyl cinnamate and cinoxate), sulisobenzone, salicylates, titanium dioxide, zinc oxide, avobenzone (Parsol 1789) and ecamsule (Mexoryl SX).

How to Wear Sunscreen

While choosing the right sunscreen is important, it won't help much if you don't use it daily and correctly. Use these tips from the experts.

Sunscreen Isn't Enough

"Some people have the impression that wearing sunscreen makes them fully protected against the sun's rays," Lim tells WebMD. "But that's not the case. No sunscreen can do that."

No matter how high the SPF, no matter how thickly you slather it on, sunscreen will never fully protect you, experts say. This misunderstanding can be dangerous: people who think they're safe wind up spending too much time in the sun and raise their risk of skin cancer and other problems.

Even your clothes may not protect you. The average cotton T-shirt only has a pitiful SPF of 4, says Leffell.

So in addition to wearing good sunscreen, you still need to take other precautions:

"Sunscreen works," says Leffell. "But protecting yourself against ultraviolet rays requires a lot more than sunscreen alone." And remember that with sunscreen, you need to defend yourself against the sun's rays with both UVA and UVB protection.

Published July 9, 2007.

Medically Reviewed June 2007.

SOURCES: American Academy of Pediatrics: "Protecting Your Child from the Sun." Karrie Fairbrother, BSN, RN, CDE, DNC, president-elect, Dermatology Nurses' Association. Lautenschlager S, The Lancet, May 3, 2007; published online. David J. Leffell, MD, professor of dermatology and surgery; chief, section of dermatologic surgery and cutaneous oncology; Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Conn; author of Total Skin (2000.) Henry W. Lim, MD, chair, department of dermatology, Henry Ford Medical Center, Detroit, MI; member of the photobiology committee, Skin Cancer Foundation; vice president of the American Academy of Dermatology. National Rosacea Society: "Sun Protection May Require Proper Sunscreen." News release: Skin Cancer Foundation. CDC: "Sunscreen: How to Select, Apply, and Use It Correctly." Environmental Protection Agency: "Sun Screen: The Burning Facts." FDA: "Trying to Look SUNsational? Complexity Persists in Using Sunscreens." News release: CBS News/WebMD: July 24, 2006: "FDA OKs New Sunscreen."

Source: http://www.webmd.com/content/article/133/118761.htm

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User Reviews and Feedback

Thanks for the info. Now I know how to use sunscreen properly. Quint

Review by Quint S   06/06/2010

 

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