Wednesday, July 06, 2022

5568 - Sunscreen


Interesting article from the Atlantic Magazine about sunscreen in the US vs the rest of the world. I'll put the link at the bottom but I'm posting the last half of the article that has the most technical info. 

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A sunscreen that has an unpleasant texture or turns your skin a strange color might be tolerable for a one-off excursion to the beach or an afternoon in the cheap seats at a baseball game, but it wouldn’t exactly encourage thorough and repeated applications of a sunscreen, which is necessary no matter which product you use. For everyday use, which is widely recommended by dermatologists, the obstacles are even harder to clear, from a formulation standpoint: Oily products don’t play nice with makeup, while chalky products look wild on pretty much everyone, especially people with darker skin tones. Adam Friedman, a dermatologist at George Washington University, told me such concerns are a huge obstacle for his patients. “You can have the best filter in the world,” he said. “If the vehicle in which that ingredient resides is visibly unacceptable or physically unacceptable in terms of application, it doesn’t matter.”

For many people, frustration with sunscreen means they don’t wear it as much as they should. For others, it means looking beyond the country’s shores for better products. In Europe, Australia, and much of Asia, sunscreens are regulated as cosmetics or health-bolstering goods, with simpler efficacy and safety standards than those in the U.S. In those markets, several dozen active ingredients are available for use in sunscreens, including some developed in the past decade that have intriguing properties. The allure of these new technologies has drawn Americans to scour the internet for supply lines that skirt FDA notice, which often means buying sunscreen through third-party sellers on Amazon. (The booming popularity of Korean beauty products in the U.S. has only added to this fervor.) A few international sunscreen products have recently become cult favorites among U.S. beauty fiends, including one that feels like a skin-care product and is marketed as a “watery essence” by Bioré, a Japanese company known to Americans mostly for producing the little paper strips that rip the gunk out of your pores.

Bioré markets some of its products in the U.S., but its ultra-popular facial sunscreen contains bemotrizinol, a chemical filter that’s popular overseas but has not yet been approved in the U.S. The substance is on a short list of those that Dobos told me have the strongest case for FDA approval—it’s widely used around the world and very effective at absorbing UV rays. Another ingredient at the top of her list is bisoctrizole, a favorite in Europe, which she said degrades more slowly in sunlight, is less readily absorbed by the wearer’s skin, and helps stabilize other UV filters when mixed with them, potentially improving their efficacy. Wearers don’t need to reapply it as often in order to remain protected, and they may not worry as much about the putative risks of carrying chemical filters in their bloodstream. (None of the experts I spoke with said there is any demonstrated danger from using standard products as directed. You probably shouldn’t eat your sunscreen, though.)

Dobos emphasized to me that she thinks the FDA’s strict regulation of sunscreen products is generally beneficial to the American public, but that the agency’s slow progress on new ingredients doesn’t match the urgency of skin cancer’s threat to public health. In formal statements and position papers, doctors and cancer-prevention advocates express considerable interest in bringing new sunscreen ingredients to the American market, but not a lot of optimism that any will be available soon. The FDA hasn’t added a new active ingredient to its sunscreen monograph—the document that details what is legally allowed in products marketed in the U.S.—in decades. The process for doing this is so onerous that L’Oreal, a French company, chose to go through a separate authorization process to get one of its sunscreen ingredients onto the consumer market in 2006—which meant that only a few specific beauty products containing that ingredient could be marketed legally.

In 2014, Congress passed a law attempting to speed access to sunscreen ingredients that have been in wide use in other countries for years, but it hasn’t really worked. “The FDA was supposed to be fast-tracking these ingredients for approval because we have the safety data and safe history of usage from the European Union,” Dobos said. “But it seems to continually be stalled.” According to Courtney Rhodes, a spokesperson for the FDA, manufacturers have submitted eight new active ingredients for consideration. The agency has asked them to provide additional data in support of those applications, but none of them has yet satisfied the agency’s requirements.

“In the medical community, there is a significant frustration about the lack of availability of some of the sunscreen active ingredients,” Henry Lim, a dermatologist at Henry Ford Health, in Michigan, told me. The more filters are available to formulators, the more they can be mixed and matched in new ways, which stands to improve not just the efficacy of the final product, but how it feels and looks on your skin, and how easy it is to apply. On a very real level, making sunscreen less onerous to use can make it more effective. “The best sunscreen is going to be the one you’re going to use often and according to the directions,” Dobos said. Skin cancer is the most common type of cancer in the United States, and by one estimate, one in five Americans will develop it in their lifetime.

For many dermatologists, these lengthy regulatory battles and widespread issues with regular usage also underline a common recommendation that tends to go unheard by patients: Sunscreen is great, and sunscreen from Europe, Australia, and Asia may be better, but even the best, most cutting-edge SPF lotion is just one part of keeping your skin healthy. Floppy hats, big beach umbrellas, or loose, high-coverage clothing might not be your ideal beach look while you’re young, but if you can mostly cover-up and stick to the shade, your elderly self will thank you.

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12 comments:

River said...

I can see one problem with the "reapply as necessary" routine. Once you have your make up on, you can't just keep smearing sunscreen over it every few hours and from what I've seen in movies and read in books/magazines etc, American women don't even leave the house without first "putting their face on", so adding extra sunscreen isn't going to happen.
Another problem rarely mentioned, is people don't follow the directions. They wait until they are in the sun and turning pink before they remember the sunscreen and that is wrong. Sunscreen contains water, making it easy to apply and MUST be applied at least a half an hour BEFORE going into the sun, this give the water component time to evaporate and time for the actual screening components to bond with the skin giving it the protection.

Mike said...

River - My dermatologist always asks me if I use sunscreen. I say SURE! But what I do use is the spray-on kind which I've read is not very effective. But it's better than nothing. I don't have the patience to spread that smelly grease all over me.

Elephant's Child said...

It is an essential here. And fortunately I don't wear make up to be washed off by it.

Debra She Who Seeks said...

I don't like sunscreen and I don't wear it, generally speaking. I practice direct sun avoidance and high-coverage clothing instead.

Kathy G said...

I've never met a sunscreen that doesn't make me feel sticky, but after having too many things burned off by the dermatologist I reluctantly use one that's mineral-based (aka white chalky look).

The large Asian market I shop at has a Korean skin care boutique. I wonder what I would find if I stopped in there?

Lady M said...

I prefer a really big hat and a sun shirt.

jenny_o said...

I can't stand the texture and the smell of sunscreen so I just stay out of the sun except in the evenings. Of course, I'm not in an extremely high risk zone, like many places in the U.S. or Australia. The ick factor really is something it would be worthwhile addressing by the FDA in combination with the manufacturers. And even though I don't live in the U.S., so often Canada's approval process follows the FDA's, so it would benefit us in short order.

Mike said...

Kathy - If Amazon doesn't have anything on their US site, use a VPN and log in from overseas.

Lady - I had not heard of sun shirts before. I just ordered some.

Jenny - Especially the smell.

Rawknrobyn.blogspot.com said...

I'm not surprised but didn't realize there's so much politics in sunscreen products. Geeze. Thank you for the info, Mike. I guess I need to make that trip to Europe, after all. (Seeing as I don't have a floppy hat.)

Actually, I use Coppertone spray. Aw, the sweet nostalgia of a potentially lethal smell. I love it. I also use daily make-up with UV protection.

Be well and happy, Mike.

Mike said...

Robyn - Or use a VPN to make stores think you're in Europe.

Margaret (Peggy or Peg too) said...

If I wear sunscreen I always get burned. Applying it every hour as they say to do etc.
I would do this when boating.
If I wear nothing, I get nothing. I do not tan or burn at all. I think this is a racket.
My husband wears sunscreen and has had precancerous lesions taken off his body/face. I'm not sure about sunscreen - okay I know I will get the wrath of the internet but it doesn't work for me!

Mike said...

Peg - To make it work you have to reapply it every couple of hours. 😝