Recent years have seen a rise in do-it-yourself care products, from deodorant to soap and toothpaste. Recipes for homemade sunscreen are some of the most popular among social media users. However, a new study warns that homemade sunscreen may offer no protection against ultraviolets.
A quick
Google search for the term “homemade sunscreen” will list about 9,750,000
results. Many are recipes for “natural,” “simple,” and “nontoxic”
do-it-yourself (DIY) products.
The
allure of DIY sunscreen is rooted in multiple factors, such as potentially
lower costs and the belief that an all-natural cream made with handpicked
ingredients is more healthful than a mass-produced sunscreen with an ingredient
list that features chemicals with illegible names.
However,
a new study warns that we shouldn’t trust the sunscreen recipes that we find
online to yield a product that offers the protection we need
against sunburn.
The study
comes from a team of researchers from the Center for Injury Research and Policy
at the Nationwide Children’s Hospital, in Columbus, OH, and the Brooks College
of Health at the University of North Florida, in Jacksonville. Its findings
will appear in the journal Health Communication.
“The
internet is a great place for families to go to for recipe inspiration and arts
and crafts projects, but not necessarily for making their own safety-related
things,” warns study co-author Lara McKenzie, Ph.D.
Homemade
sunscreen is ‘risky’
Since
social media are a top source, worldwide, when it comes to DIY products, the
researchers turned their attention to one such website: Pinterest, a social
platform that allows users to display moodboard-like digital collections of
their interests.
Some data
suggest that Pinterest is the fourth most popular social media
platform in the United States, where the website had an estimated 77.4
million users in 2018.
In the
current study, the researchers looked at how Pinterest users described and
rated various recipes for homemade sunscreen. According to the researchers,
this is the first ever study to look at the portrayal of DIY sunscreen on
Pinterest.
They
found that most — 95.2%, to be exact — of the saved posts (called “pins”)
regarding DIY sunscreen suggested that the homemade products were effective,
and 68.3% of the pins promoted DIY sunscreens that, the researchers say, did
not ensure appropriate protection against ultraviolet (UV) radiation.
Moreover,
the team noted that a third of the posts featuring recipes for homemade
sunscreen claimed specific sun protection factor — rendered on commercial
packaging as “SPF” — rankings, of anywhere from SPF 2–50.
However,
the researchers warn that such claims can be misleading, since the ingredients
featured in those recipes actually offer minimal protection against UV
radiation.
Yet many
people appear to show keen interest in these recipes pinned on Pinterest, with
users saving each such pin, on average, as many as 808 times. One specific DIY
sunscreen pin was saved over 21,700 times, the team saw.
In their
study paper, the investigators write that “[s]ocial media has become a powerful
tool for sharing health information, yet it becomes dangerous when the
information being shared isn’t accurate or complete.”
This also
applies when people take the information regarding homemade sunscreens for
granted. The researchers explain that specialists do not test such products,
and for this reason, they may not provide any protection against UV rays at
all.
“Homemade sunscreen products are risky because they are not regulated or
tested for efficacy like commercial sunscreens. When you make it yourself, you
don’t know if it’s safe or effective.”
Lara McKenzie, Ph.D.
The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) note that having “a
history of sunburns, especially early in life,” can increase the risk of developing skin
cancer. Thus, it is important to wear sunscreen that is tested and proven to be
effective, from childhood onward, whenever exposed to strong sun.
Currently,
the American Academy of Dermatology recommend using sunscreen that
offers broad-spectrum protection — that is, protection against both UVA and UVB
rays. It should also be SPF 30 or higher and water-resistant. Read more..
No comments:
Post a Comment