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Prevention
and Protection Protocols How
can skin cancer be prevented?
The American Academy of Dermatology
(AAD) has declared war on skin cancer by recommending these three
preventive steps: 
Wear protective clothing, including a hat with a four-inch brim.
A pply sunscreen all over your body and avoid the midday sun from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Regularly use a broad-spectrum sunscreen with an SPF of 15
or higher, even on cloudy days.
The following six steps have been recommended by the AAD
and the Skin Cancer Foundation to help reduce the risk of sunburn and skin cancer.
- Minimize exposure to the sun at midday -- between the
hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
- Apply sunscreen, with at least a
SPF-15 or higher that protects against both UVA and UVB rays, to all areas of the body
that are exposed to the sun.
- Reapply sunscreen every two hours,
even on cloudy days. Reapply after swimming or perspiring.
- Wear clothing that covers the body
and shades the face. Hats should provide shade for both the face and back of the neck.
Wearing sunglasses will reduce the amount of rays reaching the eye by filtering as much as
80 percent of the rays, and protecting the lids of our eyes as well as the lens.
- Avoid exposure to UV radiation from
sunlamps or tanning parlors.
- Protect children. Keep them from excessive sun exposure when the sun is strongest
(between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.), and apply sunscreen liberally and frequently to children 6
months of age and older.
Do not use sunscreen on children under 6
months of age -- instead severely limit their exposure to the sun.
Remember, sand and pavement reflect UV rays even under
the umbrella. Snow is even a particularly good reflector of UV rays. Reflective surfaces can reflect up to 85
percent of the damaging sun rays.
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