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Backpacker Magazine – August 2010

Save Your Skin: Choosing Sunblock

How to choose an effective, safe sunblock.

by: Berne Broudy

Blue Lizard Australian Sensitive (Courtesy Photo)
Blue Lizard Australian Sensitive (Courtesy Photo)
Beyond Coastal Lip & Face Screen (Courtesy Photo)
Beyond Coastal Lip & Face Screen (Courtesy Photo)
Badger SPF 15 Lipbalm (Courtesy Photo)
Badger SPF 15 Lipbalm (Courtesy Photo)

3 Editor-Tested & EWG-Approved Sunblocks
A. Blue Lizard Australian Sensitive, SPF 30 ($11-$12; 3 oz.; crownlaboratories.com)
B. Beyond Coastal Lip and Face Screen, SPF 30 ($10; 1 oz.; beyondcoastal.com)
C. Badger SPF 15 Lipbalm ($3.50; .15 oz.; badgerbalm.com)
The white goo we so diligently slather on might not be doing much. A 2009 study by the nonprofit Environmental Working Group (ewg.org) found that 10 to 30 percent of sunscreens don’t block UVA radiation, only UVB, and 41 percent use ingredients that break down quickly in the sun. Since UVB rays contribute the most to sunburn and since many sunscreens have anti-inflammatory substances, we don’t get burned, though skin damage still occurs. “The lack of enforceable rules for sunscreens means Americans are sold ineffective products with overstated safety claims,” says EWG senior analyst Sonya Lunder. The FDA plans to release new guidelines this fall. Until then:

1. Choose the right ingredients. The only active ingredients should be one or more of the following: titanium dioxide, zinc oxide, photo-stabilized avobenzone, or Mexoryl, which shield against UVA and UVB rays. Note: Since the SPF only rates UVB protection, it tells you nothing about its UVA protection. And the terms “broad-spectrum” or “blocks all harmful rays” are unreliable.

2. Avoid suspected toxins. Many ingredients are common allergens, like oxybenzone, octinoxate, and padimate, and several are “known or strongly suspected to cause cancer or birth defects, disrupt human reproduction, or damage the growing brain of a child,” the study reports. These chemicals bioaccumulate in the body, and 97 percent of Americans have oxybenzone traces in their urine.

3. Get SPF 30 or more. And reapply every two hours. (Note: SPF 50 blocks just 1.3 percent more UVB rays than SPF 30.)

4. Forego nano sprays. Lotions with nano-size zinc and titanium particles solve the mime look, but hold off on nano sprays and powders; the health effects of inhaling them are unknown.

5. Opt for “very water resistant.” This means a block lasts 80 minutes in water. The term “waterproof” is unregulated.



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READERS COMMENTS

I checked the ingredients list for Crown Lab's Blue Lizard. The Regular and Sport sunscreen had oxybenzone and oxtinoxate in it. The Sensitive and Baby did not. If you are a BSA leader or maybe a guide you can purchase these in gallon sizes, according to the webpage of products.
Posted: Sep 04, 2010 Eric Nelson

In #3 above, you say "SPF 50 blocks just 1.3 percent more UVB rays than SPF 30". That makes it sound like it's not a big difference, but it really is. SPF 30 lets in about 1.5 times as much UVB as SPF 50 would (roughly 3% vs. 2% of the UVB that would otherwise reach you). That 50% more radiation makes a differecne to someone who burns easily.
Posted: Aug 17, 2010 Florida Native

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