Friday, June 16, 2006

Screaming headlines

   The headline on the AOL welcome screen said, "sunscreens slammed as cancer risk." Holy Cow, I thought. Don't tell me Kevin Trudeau was actually right about something. I'd better click through to get more information.
   When I did so, the headline on the AOL News page was a little bit different:
Sunscreens Faulted on Cancer Protection. That sounds similar to the first headline, but it doesn't quite read the same, does it? When you read the article you find that sunscreens are not, as stated in the first headline, "slammed as [a] cancer risk." No, what you find is that most sunscreens do not offer as much protection against skin cancer as they could, but mostly because they tend to be applied incorrectly and too infrequently by users:

Many sunscreens say little about when to reapply - doctors say at least every two hours and after swimming or sweating. Nor do they say much about how much to use, roughly two tablespoons for an adult.

``Most people who use an SPF 15 get the protection equivalent to an SPF 5 because they put it on'' too thinly, said Dr. Martin A. Weinstock, chairman of the American Cancer Society's skin cancer advisory group and a Brown University professor.

While a higher SPF number means more protection, the difference is small: SPF 15 blocks about 93 percent of UVB rays and SPF 50, often more expensive, blocks about 98 percent.

Most sunscreens work by reacting chemically with the skin, so they don't start absorbing damaging rays right away and must be applied a half-hour before going outside, something many labels fail to note.

and:

Still, doctors say people shouldn't abandon sunscreen: They probably should use more.

``Sunscreens do protect against skin cancer,'' said Dr. Babar Rao, a dermatologist at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Jersey. ``We definitely still need sunscreen, even on a cloudy day.''

Research has shown heavy sunscreen use lowersrisk of squamous skin cell cancer, which has a high cure rate if caught early. Another study found heavy sunscreen use in children reduces the number of moles, which can turn cancerous later, Weinstock noted.

(Bolding mine in the above.)
   So, is sunscreen a cancer risk? Sorry Kevin, no validation for you today. What's the moral of the story? Don't believe the headlines? Partly. I think a broader moral would be, think critically about every single thing you hear. Everything is not always as it seems, or as it is stated.


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9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ah yes - things aren't always what they seems. Sometimes those damn heels will be all cute and comfortable in the store . . . take them home, wear them for an entire work day, and BAAM not so cute and comfortable any more!

Amanda :)
http://journals.aol.com/trickeytricky/CountryMyKindaLivin

Anonymous said...

It's always shoes with you, isn't it, Amanda?
-Paul

Anonymous said...

I also heard about this on the news this morning and they noted people who use sunscreen are apt to spend more time in the sun, just because they have it on.

Anonymous said...

Oh, and Amanda...those heels are only meant to be worn when you're on your back anyway.

Anonymous said...

Ouch!
-Paul

Anonymous said...

Speaking of screaming headlines, why do I feel a sudden urge to start banking with ING this morning?

How's that investigation of Blogger coming, Paul?

Simon
http://simianfarmer.com

Anonymous said...

A course or two in Critical Thinking ought to be a part of every school's core curriculum.  When local educators tried to do just that a few years ago, they were shouted down by parents who maintained their teens were already too critical of everything their parents said!

Anonymous said...

Dearest Paul,
Ah! Whata great idea!:):) Have  a great father's day with your family!Will you be regaled? Will you barbeque? have fun!
natalie

Anonymous said...

Paul, you've stumbled upon one of my biggest pet peeves:  This current trend in journalism to mislead and shock the living hell out of people in an attempt to scare them into reading a story.  And, televised news is worse.  All you have to do is watch Fox News here in the US, and you'll laugh yourself silly at the fear-mongering talking heads.  The other networks aren't much better, either.  Eventually, we Americans will be too scared to think straight --much less think critically about anything we read.   I mean, we even have a flippin' color-coded gague to let us know how scared we're supposed to be.  It's pathetic, really.  

Anyway, have a great Father's Day.  It may just save your life!  

-Dan
http://journals.aol.com/dpoem/TheWisdomofaDistractedMind/