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Sun Exposure: Protecting Children

The sun’s rays can be hazardous for children. Blistering sunburns in childhood and adolescence are especially dangerous and are strongly associated with increased risk of skin cancer later in life. Everyone should protect themselves from sun exposure, regardless of skin color.

Protection Strategies

Effective strategies to protect children when outdoors in the sun include (1) sunscreens or sun blocks, and (2) sun-protective clothing.

Sunscreens are regulated by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). There are two types of active ingredients: mineral and chemical. Titanium dioxide and zinc oxide (mineral) are highly effective at reflecting and scattering the sun’s rays away from the skin. Chemical sunscreens (examples include oxybenzone, octinoxate, avobenzone, homosalate) absorb the sun’s rays and keep them from causing skin damage.  Because chemical-based sunscreens have been linked to allergic reactions and hormone disruption, we recommend mineral-based sunscreens.

Sun-protective clothing: The tightness of the weave, the weight, type of fiber, color, and amount of skin covered all affect the amount of protection that clothing provides from the sun. In general, clothing made of tightly woven fabric best protects skin from the sun. The easiest way to test if a fabric can protect your skin is to hold it up to light. If you can see through it, then UV radiation can penetrate it and reach your skin.

Clothes may also be treated with UV-absorbing chemicals, such as titanium dioxide, which may provide additional protection. Unlike sunscreens, which are regulated by the FDA, there are no universally accepted standards for testing and labeling.

What can I do to reduce exposure to harmful radiation rays from the sun?

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