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Post Info TOPIC: There’s Almost No Evidence Daily Sunscreen Use Can Prevent Skin Cancer


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There’s Almost No Evidence Daily Sunscreen Use Can Prevent Skin Cancer
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There’s Almost No Evidence Daily Sunscreen Use Can Prevent Skin Cancer

But here’s why we should still keep using it, anyway

 08/05/2016 12:57 pm ET | Updated 19 hours ago
 
RADIUS IMAGES VIA GETTY IMAGES

By Lisa Rapaport

(Reuters Health) - There isn’t much evidence to conclusively prove that daily sunscreen use can prevent most skin cancers, a research review concludes.

 But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t use sunscreen, doctors say. It just means it’s unethical to do experiments testing the effectiveness of sunscreen by randomly assigning some people to use it and others to skip it.

“Lack of high quality experimental evidence should not be equated with evidence that such interventions are ineffective and it is important that patients and consumers do not stop protecting their skin until better quality evidence emerges,” lead authors Dr. Ingrid Arevalo-Rodriguez and Dr. Guillermo Sanchez of the Instituto de Evaluacion Technologica en Salud in Bogota, Colombia told Reuters Health by email.

Dr. Laura Ferris, a dermatologist at the University of Pittsburgh who wasn’t involved in the research review, pointed out, also by email, that it’s difficult to measure the effect of sun protection on the prevention of skin cancer, “particularly because it is not ethical or practical to randomize the population.”

“One could not, for example, tell one group to seek shade, wear a hat, and use sunscreen and another to sit in the direct sun and abstain from use of sunscreen,” Ferris added. “So lack of evidence does not mean that sun protection has no impact on the risk of skin cancer, just that the impact is difficult to measure.”

In a review published by the Cochrane Library, Arevalo-Rodriguez and Sanchez and colleagues set out to assess how much we already know about whether sunscreen and other protective measures, such as wearing hats or sunglasses or staying in the shade, prevent skin cancer.

They focused on what’s known as basal cell and cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas, which make up the majority of skin cancer cases. Their analysis didn’t look at melanoma, a rare and much more deadly type of skin cancer.

The research team only wanted to look at trials that randomly assigned some people to use sunscreen or other protection - and they found just one study that met their criteria.

This study, done in Australia, monitored about 1,600 people for more than four years and didn’t find a meaningful difference in the number of new cancer cases detected based on whether people used sunscreen every day or only occasionally.

That might not be long enough to follow patients to see ifsunscreen prevents skin cancer because it can take several years after sun exposure to detect abnormalities on the skin.

What this does suggest is that more high-quality research is needed, the authors told Reuters Health.

In the meantime, “Patients and consumers in general need to consult health professionals to obtain specific advice about the need of specific preventive measures, according with their age, skin color, occupation and presence of other risk factors for skin cancer, among other factors,” they added.

Even without more studies, there’s already plenty of proof that exposure to ultraviolet rays from the sun causes skin cancer and melanoma, noted Dr. David Leffell, a skin cancer researcher at Yale School of Medicine who wasn’t involved in the research review.

“The scientific facts are inescapable—regular use of sun protection reduces skin cancer and cancer precursors,” Leffell said by email.

“The benefits of sun protection and the incontrovertible evidence of sunburn and chronic sun exposure as a cause of about 60 percent of melanomas should inspire people to continue reasonable sun protection if they fit into the moderate to high risk groups, and even if they don’t,” Leffell added.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/theres-almost-no-evidence-daily-sunscreen-use-can-prevent-skin-cancer_us_57a4bf03e4b021fd98786f0b?section=&

 



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On the bright side...... Christmas is coming! (Mod)

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Well, getting horribly burned is such a nice alternative.

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Actually i think people get burned because they dont allow their skin to get used to the sun. I dont wear sunscreen often. When spring comes i gradually allow myself to get used to it. I dont get burned. So if i am out gardening etc that is what i do. Now if i am going to spend the day at the lake or go on vacay at the ocean and spend long periods in the sun then i wear it.

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There's plenty of evidence that using sunscreen prevents your skin from looking like an old saddle.
That's why I wear it, even though I don't burn.

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I've been sunburned in the winter.

I don't wear sunscreen every day. But if I plan on being out in the sun for a long time, I do.

The thing about using sunscreen is, it doesn't prevent cancer, it prevents sunburn.

Sunburn damages the skin which can cause cancer to become active.

Sunscreen doesn't mean you won't get skin cancer.

It just lowers your chances by protecting you against sunburn.



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Tangerine wrote:

There's plenty of evidence that using sunscreen prevents your skin from looking like an old saddle.
That's why I wear it, even though I don't burn.


 Sun is good for u.  That's why their are so many Vit D deficient people now. 



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I don't wear sunscreen. My mother used to slather me with SPF 4 when I was a kid when we were at the beach as we didn't put up an umbrella. Other than that, I never wore it. I can probably count on one hand how many times I've worn it since I was a teen. Like LGS, I work up to it. When it becomes warm enough to be outside, I'll be out in smaller increments until I have a good base tan.

I put sunscreen on the boys when they were babies and in the past. This year they both had good enough tans from just being outside at school that I don't worry about it even now. I did spray them at the beach, but I myself did not wear it. But I was smart enough to know when I'd had enough and sought shade. Kids aren't really aware until it's too late. Now when we're home and in the pool, no one wears sunscreen. There is usually shade somewhere in our yard at all times if we need to escape.

Moisturizer prevents skin from looking like an old saddle. I wear a lot of that.

Vit D is very important and people aren't getting enough. Another thing people are deficient in is Iodine because most salts now are not iodized.

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My dermatologist wants me to wear zinc on my face and a large floppy hat on my head.

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Lady Gaga Snerd wrote:
Tangerine wrote:

There's plenty of evidence that using sunscreen prevents your skin from looking like an old saddle.
That's why I wear it, even though I don't burn.


 Sun is good for u.  That's why their are so many Vit D deficient people now. 


 Sunscreen doesn't stop you from absorbing vitamin D.

 



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The more burns you have the greater chance of skin cancer. So using sunscreen to prevent burns is wise.

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I'm a redhead and I'm allergic to most sunscreens. I've been burnt to the point of blistering many times. Lord willing, I won't get skin cancer.

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chef wrote:

I'm a redhead and I'm allergic to most sunscreens. I've been burnt to the point of blistering many times. Lord willing, I won't get skin cancer.


 DH is a redhead as well and has been burnt to a crisp several times. We have a dark sense of humor in our house and whenever I see a new freckle on him I joke that it's the one that's going to "do him in". 



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Mellow Momma wrote:
chef wrote:

I'm a redhead and I'm allergic to most sunscreens. I've been burnt to the point of blistering many times. Lord willing, I won't get skin cancer.


 DH is a redhead as well and has been burnt to a crisp several times. We have a dark sense of humor in our house and whenever I see a new freckle on him I joke that it's the one that's going to "do him in". 


 You guys are as bad as we are biggrin

I will burn the first couple times I'm out in the sun when it starts getting hotter but once the burn peels, I tan. I have a prominent driver's tan so my left side is always darker than my right. I can't be bothered to care about it.



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lilyofcourse wrote:
Lady Gaga Snerd wrote:
Tangerine wrote:

There's plenty of evidence that using sunscreen prevents your skin from looking like an old saddle.
That's why I wear it, even though I don't burn.


 Sun is good for u.  That's why their are so many Vit D deficient people now. 


 Sunscreen doesn't stop you from absorbing vitamin D.

 


 Really? I'd always heard that it does.



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Tangerine wrote:

There's plenty of evidence that using sunscreen prevents your skin from looking like an old saddle.
That's why I wear it, even though I don't burn.


 Yeah, I wished I'd known to wear it as a teenager.  The damage started showing up a couple of years ago and the sunspots are annoying. 

 

And you only need about 10 minutes a day in the sun to get your daily Vitamin D.  Most people are in the sun longer than sunscreen works, anyway, so Vitamin D is not an issue. 



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