Compared to wearing sun-protective clothes and avoiding the sun, using sunscreen is the least effective way to prevent sunburn on the skin.

Understanding the Perceived Relationship between Sun Exposure and Melanoma in Atlantic Canada: A Consensual Qualitative Study Highlighting a “Sunscreen Paradoxâ€
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‘Sunscreen Paradox’- False Sense of Security Of Sunscreens
“The problem is that people use sunscreen as a ‘permission slip’ to tan. People think they are protected from skin cancer because they are using a product marketed to prevent a condition," said Dr Ivan Litvinov, associate Professor at McGill University, Canada. Most people don’t apply enough sunscreen or stay in the sun for hours after applying sunscreen in the morning, which gives them a "false sense of security", he added. To understand the factors between varying incidence rates of melanoma, the researchers conducted two studies.TOP INSIGHT
Interventions to address knowledge and practice gaps in sun protection and skin cancer prevention must consider the sunscreen paradox and the unique norms of communities around the world. #sunscreen #pseudoeffect #sunprotection #skincancer #melanoma
Similarly, in the second study of the UK Biobank, the researchers documented that sunscreen use was surprisingly associated with a more than two-fold risk of developing skin cancer.
“These combined findings suggest a sunscreen paradox, whereby individuals with higher levels of sun exposure also tend to use more but not an adequate quantity of sunscreen or other sun-protection measures, providing a false sense of security,” Litvinov said.
Reference:
- Understanding the Perceived Relationship between Sun Exposure and Melanoma in Atlantic Canada: A Consensual Qualitative Study Highlighting a “Sunscreen Paradox” - (https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6694/15/19/4726)
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