“People are just doing a lot to their face,” says Dr Gunatheesan,founder of Melbourne’s ODE Dermatology,referring to the multiple skincare steps – including various serums and moisturisers – that many people now regularly apply. “So people go,‘Uh,maybe I need to put my sunscreen under my vitamin B and C.’ So it’s the numerous steps that I think are confusing people.”
Now that we’re heading into summer when UVA and UVB rays – the ones largely responsible for,respectively,skin ageing and skin cancer – are at their peak,what should we be doing to keep ourselves protected?
As a matter of course,people need to be applying sunscreen first thing in the morning on any day that is forecast to reach a UV level of three or above at some point,says Rachel Neale,a skin cancer researcher at the QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute in Brisbane. (This information can be found at the Australian Government’s Bureau of Meterology’s website and on the Cancer Council’s SunSmart app.)
And Neale says that unless you’re going to be inside a building with very few windows all day and will only be out for a few minutes here and there,you should reapply your sunscreen – she recommends a minimum of SPF30 – every two to three hours.
“The morning one[sunscreen application] is your sort of ‘Protect you just in case’,but it’s not sufficient,“she says. “That’s an important thing to remember.”
Another? Studies show that people generally put on less than half the sunscreen that is necessary to get the full SPF level listed on their tube and miss spots when they apply,says Neale. This is why she recommends that people apply sunscreen twice to areas of the body that are regularly exposed and where most skin cancers occur – hands,forearms and face – making sure to let one coat dry before putting on the second.