Healthy Living

Friday, December 11, 2009

Why It's Harder Than Ever To Find Safe, Natural Sunscreens

It's warming up in the Northeast - Memorial Day weekend is nearly upon us - which means readers are in the market for and asking about safe sunblock again. I haven't given the goop much thought since last summer so have been just sending curious emailers a link to what I last wrote here about sunscreen.

A few weeks ago, I finally went shopping for new tubes of my chosen brands and the stock looked a bit sparse. Several days later I happened on the following announcement on my mainstay brand's website:

"New European regulations for sunscreens will soon require levels of UVA protection that are impossible to achieve with natural mineral sun filters such as the titanium dioxide in Dr.Hauschka Sunscreens. In order to meet the requirements of these new regulations and maintain our products' SPF ratings, we would be forced to reformulate using synthetic filters.

"Our unwavering dedication to pure, holistic skin care and BDIH guidelines for natural ingredients prevent us from using synthetic sun filters in our preparations. As a result, Dr.Hauschka Skin Care has made the difficult decision to discontinue our existing sun care range."As of January 1, 2009, Dr.Hauschka Sun Care products will no longer be available in the U.S."

This was truly news to me. That it happened back in January was a shock -- how come no one told me? I picked up the phone and started emailing to see if anyone else knew what these new regulations were, and, most importantly, what other people were going to use, especially as other natural/pure European brands like Weleda and Santaverde have also discontinued their sunblocks for the same reason. As it turns out, I'm not the only one in the dark about these new regulations. Several colleagues are now doing the scramble I'm doing, and I'm eagerly awaiting news of their new chosen brands. The organic beauty purist Kirstin Binder at SaffronRouge.com was the only insider I contacted who knew about the changes, as she carried all of the discontinued European brands. The only un-discontinued block she currently sells, Erbaviva, is American. Binder says it's "great" and is "desperately" looking for other clean organic sunscreens. (She also sells Soleo, which is Australian, but she says they're having stock issues this year, an unhappy coincidence.)

Interim Recommendations For Choosing Safe Sunscreen
lotion on girl

Because I'm waiting to hear back from many trusted resources, and because I still have yet to get my hands on these new European regulations, I expect this to be a first post in a sunblock series. Check back. But here's my attempt to make sense of this situation in the interim:

As a consumer, it's scary to hear that something you've been using to protect your skin and your children's skin isn't deemed safe enough in Europe anymore. That said, it was deemed safe enough in past years. I haven't burned. And, as of now, natural mineral sun filters (titanium dioxide and zinc) are still considered safe in the United States, though they may be less effective than some newer chemical UVA screening agents I wouldn't personally use on myself or my daughter.

These have always been and remain - based on my recent conversations -- my sunblock priorities:

  • to use sunscreen (I have skin cancer in my family)
  • to apply sunblock early, often, and copiously, even if the pure products are ridiculously expensive, but also to do what the Campaign For Safe Cosmetics' Stacy Malkan refers to as a "good old fashioned remedy" -- staying out of the sun in peak hours and using hats. I also hug the shady side of the street, and have recently started wearing SPF clothing when at the beach.
  • to use a block that contains natural mineral sun filters but does not contain undesirables like parabens, synthetic fragrance, and dyes, among other things. These are ingredients I avoid in all of my cosmetics; sunblock is no different, even though it's clearly more necessary than, say, lipstick. This is crucial and requires close ingredient label reading when buying a new-to-you brand. There are some sunblocks with low hazard ratings on The Environmental Working Group's sunscreen guide, for example that contain parabens and more. Skin Deep is undeniably an excellent resource but it doesn't absolve consumers of their ingredient label reading duty, especially in the natural product arena. Check and double check. And FYI -- waterproof and natural aren't mutually exclusive.

As for sunblock brands, I'm personally stockpiling the discontinued Dr. Hauschka and Weleda - the expiration dates on the leftover stock are in 2010. (I used a lot of Lavera over the last few years but have yet to hear back from them on if they've discontinued or reformulated, so I'm not stockpiling them. Yet.) I'm also trying out Erbaviva. If these options aren't available to you, sorry to sound like a broken record, but read ingredient labels carefully to make an informed purchase following my basic advice.

Nanotechnology in Sunscreens

This brings me to my next confusing sunblock issue - nanotechnology. Based on my research, several popular and widely available American brands of natural mineral sunscreen like California Baby and the very pure Badger spell out on their labels - though they aren't required to do so and most brands don't - that their titanium dioxide is "micronized."

"Micronized is a code for nano[technology]," says Jennifer Sass, a senior scientist/toxicologist in the National Resource Defense Council's health program. "There is some evidence that it is passing through the skin, and that those materials are harmful. The body of evidence is building."

Unfortunately there's no way of knowing which sunscreens contain something nano-ized or micronized, or even how big the particles are (apparently this makes a difference). And to make matters worse, the trustworthy sources in this arena disagree on the safety of nanotechnology. Sass and a group called Friends Of The Earth say (pdf) to avoid nano materials in sunscreen. Friends Of The Earth also offers a (short) list of nano-free options, some natural, some not. But The Environmental Working Group deems micronized titanium dioxide safe, and even says it offers greater sun protection than larger particles. How I Choose Sunscreen

So it falls to the citizen scientist consumer to read these differing opinions, then to make a sliding scale of risk. Not cool. Mine goes something like this: sun is bad, you want to block it. There's a lot of gunk in normal sunscreen that is also proven to be bad for you.

First, find a natural block.

Second, find a natural block that doesn't contain a whole host of chemical ingredients that are known to be harmful.

Third, see if you can find a block that meets the prior two criterion and that also doesn't contain micronized ingredients.

This information isn't easy to come by. Some of my chosen brands of yore may or may not have done a little unpublicized micronizing. One simple test is that non-micronized natural blocks go on white (and often pasty or thick), not clear.

"It's good to wear sunscreen but you don't have to pass that stuff into your bloodstream," says Sass. That's my motto as I go about figuring out more about these European regulations and finding the purest replacement products.


posted by Alexandra


Related links from the Daily Green:

* Most Recent Toxic Toy Recalls
* The Dirty Dozen: 12 Toxic Foods to Eat Organic
* Take the Quiz: How Green Do You Want to Be?
* DIY Organic Baby Food
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Reprinted with Permission of Hearst Communications, Inc.

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From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 50
  • Manon's Avatar
    Posted by Manon Thu May 21, 2009 12:53pm PDT

    Dear Alexandra,

    First of all I love reading your blog. I just found it a couple of days ago. I am a mum from the Netherlands, blogging about the same things as you do and owner of a web store opening at the end of May with all organic products.

    I have been searching for a good sunscreen for years now and in my search last month I came in contact with Lavera http://www.lavera.com/catalog/Sunscreens-1000014-1.html&show=info

    They told me that the 'Colipa" (organization for cosmetics) regulation has been changed. You get the best protection from the sun when the relation between the absorption of UVA and UVB radiation is 1:3.

    In organic cosmetics this is very hard to achieve and Lavera claims to ben the only one who has achieved this. As a consequence the maximum factor is 20.

    Lavera always does very well in the safecosmetics database and for that reason I really appreciate them.

    I tried there new sunscreen and I have to say that is was quite easy to use, it does leave a bit of a white shine but not too terrible. The only negative thing to me was that I did not like the smell. But I accept this because I want my daughter to be save.

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  • ashley's Avatar
    Posted by ashley Fri May 22, 2009 1:51pm PDT

    There's still a reasonable selection at health food stores. And there's always the option of making your own, just find a recipe or the necessary ingredients online.

    Report Abuse
  • Jett's Avatar
    Posted by Jett Fri May 22, 2009 2:01pm PDT

    I guess I never realized the ill effects that synthetic ingredients in sunscreen can have. I too am a big fan of SPF, and it saddens me to know that so many reputable companies that were the leading providers of organic sunscreen are no longer able to abide by the SPF laws in Europe.

    Incidentally, do you know what SPF Europe requires? I was under the impression that anything over a 30 is just superfluous anyway, and that 45 doesn't do anything that 30 can't do. That's just what I heard.

    The only response I have is this: What's worse — whatever non-organic sunscreens or sunscreens with micronized ingredients will do to you, or skin cancer? I don't know the answer to that, but it seems to me that everything comes with a cost, and rather than worrying about what my lotion is going to do to me in the long run, at the moment I'm more concerned with developing skin cancer. My grandmother had skin cancer and had to suffer through it for years before she died. I don't know of anyone who died from sunscreen. If my Banana Boat sunscreen is the ultimate cause of my death, well then, I'm going to die eventually anyway. In the mean time I'm preventing against skin cancer, and I eat well and take care of myself in other ways to help prevent against other cancers. I'm all for having the most information I can get, but in the end we all die anyway.

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  • Jett's Avatar
    Posted by Jett Fri May 22, 2009 2:03pm PDT

    Just to explain, I have nothing against organic products. I've used many in the past and still buy organic when I can and if I feel it's necessary. I hope you are able to find the products you need for yourself and for your daughter.

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  • GiGi's Avatar
    Posted by GiGi Mon May 25, 2009 1:04pm PDT

    Ive been told that elta MD skincare uv lotion spf 3o+ was the safe kind

    It is transparent Zinc oxide is formulated with Z-Cote and protects both UVA and UVB rays..

    . I get the Daily moisturizer w/ sunscreen and use it on my face daily.. www.eltamd.com

    Report Abuse
  • GiGi's Avatar
    Posted by GiGi Mon May 25, 2009 1:04pm PDT

    Ive been told that elta MD skincare uv lotion spf 3o+ was the safe kind

    It is transparent Zinc oxide is formulated with Z-Cote and protects both UVA and UVB rays..

    . I get the Daily moisturizer w/ sunscreen and use it on my face daily.. www.eltamd.com

    Report Abuse
  • Bonnie's Avatar
    Posted by Bonnie Tue May 26, 2009 2:59pm PDT

    Have you tried Juice Beauty's SPF 30 Mineral Sheer or Tinted Moisturizers? Also, I use Badger sunscreen and it doesn't say "micronized". That must be something new, b/c mine just says "zinc oxide" and it's definitely pretty white (takes a couple minutes to sink in and adjust to my skin tone).

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  • bing's Avatar
    Posted by bing Tue May 26, 2009 7:33pm PDT

    I am an athletic lady in my 50's. I use coconut virgin oil on my face, thus serves as natural sunscreen. I also take two spoonfuls a day of it. It has vitamin e, lauric acid and anti-oxidant

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  • 's Avatar
    Posted by Mon Jun 8, 2009 6:26am PDT

    Caribbean Blue-natural basics line of 100% all natural suncare products uses only mineral-based zinc oxide and can be found at www.gocaribbeanblue.com

    They will soon be coming out with an organic version, with no micronized or nano -just regular zinc oxide.

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