Publications by authors named "B L Diffey"

Objective: To propose a strategy for using sunscreens that optimizes the balance between skin health and adverse effects to humans and the environment.

Methods: A model was developed to explore the relationship between sunscreen usage and personal sun exposure throughout the year in populations resident at different latitudes.

Results: There is little biological justification in terms of skin health for applying sunscreen over the 4-6 winter months at latitudes of 45° N and higher, whereas year-round sunscreen is advised at latitudes of 30° N and lower.

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Beach holidays in areas of strong sunlight are popular and sunscreen is often the primary means of photoprotection favored by many people. The object of this study was to estimate how effective sunscreen is in preventing sunburn under high ultraviolet (UV) levels. We used a computational model to determine how the quantity, frequency, substantivity, and labeled SPF of applied sunscreens impact on the predicted erythemal response in unacclimatized skin over the course of a 7-day holiday in a high-solar environment.

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Natural and Simulated Solar Radiation.

Curr Probl Dermatol

February 2022

The extra-terrestrial solar spectrum corresponds approximately to a black body of temperature about 5,800 K, with the ultraviolet region accounting for almost 8% of the total solar energy. Terrestrial solar spectral irradiance peaks at around 500 nm in the blue-green region, whereas the diffuse component peaks in the UVAI-blue region of the spectrum, with the infrared component comprising almost entirely direct radiation. Several factors impact on the magnitude and spectral profile of terrestrial solar spectral irradiance, and these include solar elevation, reflection from land and sea, air pollution, altitude above sea level and cloud cover.

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