PROTECT YOUR SKIN FROM HEAD TO TOES

It’s time to make SPF a part of your daily routine and reduce the risk of cancer.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Sun Protection

The sun sustains life and feels good, but it can be your skin’s worst enemy. While every sunburn can increase your risk of skin cancer, it’s not just those big days at the beach or ballgame that cause trouble. Each time you run out to get the mail, walk the dog or commute to work without sun protection also adds to the damage that can lead to skin cancer (as well as leathery skin, dark spots and wrinkles).

No single method of sun defense can protect you perfectly, though. That’s why we created this roundup of advice for you. The best path to beautiful, healthy skin is to adopt as many of these steps as possible into your lifestyle, and make them daily habits everywhere you go, all year long.

 
 
 

Reviewed by: Deborah S. Sarnoff, MD and Skin Cancer Foundation
Last updated: June 2021

 

How to Perform a Skin Self-Exam, and What to Look For

The desire to avoid illness is a good enough motivator to develop healthy habits. We eat well, exercise, wash our hands and take vitamins. Avoiding skin cancer is no exception — we wear sunscreen, seek the shade and cover up with clothing to reduce our risk. Unfortunately, even those with the most diligent sun protection regimen aren’t immune.

Since preventive behaviors can’t stop every illness, learning to nip diseases in the bud can prevent the most severe outcomes. Skin cancer is a great example of how detecting and treating a disease early can have an impact on prognosis. With melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, the five-year survival rate is 99 percent if the cancer is found early. The survival rate drops to 68 percent if the disease reaches the lymph nodes, and 30 percent when the disease metastasizes to distant organs. While the more common basal cell carcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas have high cure rates, they can become disfiguring and even life threatening if not caught early.

Reference: Skin Cancer Foundation

Early detection allows us to treat some skin cancers with topical medicines or modalities that are not effective for cancers that are found later,” Dr. Brackeen says. “Even when treated with surgery, early skin cancers leave smaller scars and tend to have much fewer complications (like bleeding and infections).
— Jeffrey Brackeen, MD, a board-certified dermatologist
 

WHAT TO LOOK FOR: ABCDES OF MELANOMA

CÁNCER DE PIEL: ESPAÑOL

Download the AAD's body mole map to note the results of your self-examination. Consult your dermatologist immediately if any of your moles or pigmented spots exhibit:

Reference: American Academy of Dermatology

 
 
 
  • A is for Asymmetry

    One half of the spot is unlike the other half.

  • B is for Border

    B is for Border

  • C is for Color

    The spot has varying colors from one area to the next, such as shades of tan, brown or black, or areas of white, red, or blue.

  • D is for Diameter

    While melanomas are usually greater than 6 millimeters, or about the size of a pencil eraser, when diagnosed, they can be smaller.

E is for Evolving

The spot looks different from the rest or is changing in size, shape, or color.