Search results for '"sun exposure" or (sunscreens or sunscreen or sunscreening) or (sunscreen or sunscreening or sunscreens)'
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- Sunscreens and Cancer



- International Health News - Your
Gateway to Better Health Review of the evidence linking the use of sunscreens to an increased risk of melanoma and skin cancer SUNSCREENS AND CANCER by Hans R. Larsen, MSc ChE In 1991 Professor Johan Moan of the Norwegian Cancer Institute made an astounding discovery
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http://www.yourhealthbase.com/database/rsunscreens.htm
03/27/04, 22436 bytes
- Parents should not rely solely on sunscreen



- Parents should not rely solely on sunscreen TUBINGEN, GERMANY. Moles on the skin (melanocytic nevi) can, in a small number of cases, eventually develop into melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer. The importance of moles lies in the identification of those with potential for malignant change
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http://www.yourhealthbase.com/database/a158f.htm
10/10/05, 4366 bytes
- Do sunscreens promote melanoma?



- Do sunscreens promote melanoma? MILAN, ITALY. Conventional medical wisdom has it that the liberal use of sunscreens helps prevent skin cancer and melanoma. Several researchers have challenged this assumption. Scientists from three European cancer research institutes now report a clear association between
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http://www.yourhealthbase.com/database/a88f.htm
03/02/04, 4976 bytes
- Sunscreens and melanoma



- Sunscreens and melanoma MILAN, ITALY. There is growing evidence that the use of sunscreens tends to increase the time spent in the sun, thereby possibly increasing the risk of cutaneous melanoma. A team of researchers from the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer now reports that
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http://www.yourhealthbase.com/database/a109l.htm
03/02/04, 4294 bytes
- International Health News Editorial – August 2001



- EDITORIAL – AUGUST 2001 At this time of the year I receive numerous enquiries concerning the use of sunscreens. The "official" advice given by dermatologists and other physicians is still that sunlight should be avoided as much as possible and sunscreens should be slathered on as thickly as possible
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http://www.yourhealthbase.com/database/e116.htm
03/02/04, 4377 bytes
- International Health News Letter to the Editor – August 2001



- LETTER TO THE EDITOR – AUGUST 2001 I have just finished reading your article on sunscreens and skin cancer and I have to admit I was absolutely shocked at the things I have found out. I have a young child who has been playing outside quite a bit and I have taken quite a few of the precautions that
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http://www.yourhealthbase.com/database/l116c.htm
03/02/04, 3831 bytes
- Nothing wrong with a healthy tan



... tan BRISTOL, UNITED KINGDOM. For years the medical establishment has been bombarding the public with advice to stay out of the sun, slather on sunscreen, and in general consider the sun as an enemy rather than as a friend. Fortunately, the public has been slow to accept this message and most people ...
http://www.yourhealthbase.com/database/a94c.htm
03/02/04, 4409 bytes
- NEWSBRIEF – NOVEMBER 2000



- NEWSBRIEF - Safety of sunscreens questioned. There is growing evidence that the widespread use of sunscreens may actually increase the risk of skin cancer because it encourages people to stay out in the sun longer. Now Norwegian researchers report that 90 per cent of all sunscreens on the market contain
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http://www.yourhealthbase.com/database/n107e.htm
03/02/04, 3052 bytes
- Is our average vitamin D intake woefully inadequate?



... accepted RDAs (Recommended Daily Allowances) are totally inadequate to prevent osteoporosis and osteomalacia. He points out that total-body sun exposure easily provides the equivalent of 10,000 IU of vitamin D a day and that this amount is what the human race originating in Africa was originally accustomed ...
http://www.yourhealthbase.com/database/a91a.htm
03/02/04, 4558 bytes
- NEWSBRIEF – JUNE 2001



- NEWSBRIEF - Sunscreens implicated in cancer Researchers at the Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology at the University of Zurich warn that many of the active components in sunscreens (benzophenone-3, octyl-methoxycinnamate, and octyl-dimethyl-PABA, etc.) behave like estrogen and make cancer cells
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http://www.yourhealthbase.com/database/n114f.htm
03/02/04, 2906 bytes
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