We’ve all heard the myth that black girls don’t need sunblock
— if they even tan. It’s simply not true. There is no debating it: Women of all
races need to wear SPF. SPF measures how long skin covered with sunscreen takes
to burn compared to uncovered skin.
It is true that people with darker skin tones don’t sunburn
as easily as those with fairer skin colors because they have an increased
amount of epidermal melanin, which provides a natural SPF. Some people with
very dark skin have a natural SPF of 13 and filter twice as much UV radiation.
However, at the end of the day they’re still susceptible to skin cancer, sun
spots, and wrinkles.
According to research from the University of Cincinnati, when
discovered in African Americans, Latinos, and Asians, melanoma — a malignant
tumor — is usually fatal because they are not using sunscreen or they wait
until it’s too late to see a doctor for dark spots. Health experts advise
everyone, regardless of skin color, to apply an SPF of at least 15. I love to
keep a caramel/bronze glow to my skin, so I always make sure that I’ve lathered
up in sunblock before laying out..
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