expired Posted by Rokket | Staff • Feb 22, 2025
Feb 22, 2025 8:56 PM
Item 1 of 4
Item 1 of 4
expired Posted by Rokket | Staff • Feb 22, 2025
Feb 22, 2025 8:56 PM
6-Oz Hempz Daily Body SPF 50 Sunscreen (Sweet Pineapple and Honeymelon)
+ Free Store Pickup$5.00
$17
70% offUlta Beauty
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Something to think about if that matters to you
16 Comments
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank soopern0va
Something to think about if that matters to you
Something to think about if that matters to you
Not sure, but you might check Wirecutter (NYT) for their reviews as a starting point
https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutte...Sun
Something to think about if that matters to you
I looked at the ingredients and I don't see Octocrylene listed. Does it go by another name or what am I missing?
Edit: I'm an idiot. I was looking at inactive ingredients. It's listed loud and clear on the actives. Carry on.
https://www.ewg.org/sunscreen/
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There is "reef friendly" and "reef safe".
https://www.ewg.org/sunscreen/
Thanks for that. It definitely takes a commitment of time to do the research on sunscreens, but I guess I better get off my ass and save my skin.
" Just one in four sunscreens out of 1,700 SPF products assessed in EWG's 2024 Guide to Sunscreens meets our standards for ingredient safety and sun protection efficacy. Products sold in the U.S. continue to fall short because of ongoing Food and Drug Administration inaction.
The sunscreen industry has been stuck with a regulatory status quo from the late 1990s, when Bill Clinton was president and people worried that computer systems would fail due to the Y2K bug. Companies continue to use product ingredients approved by the FDA in 1999, even though the agency has said there isn't adequate safety data to use those ingredients.
EWG's Guide to Sunscreens helps families find the few products made with safer ingredients and adequate sun protection. This includes EWG Verified® sunscreens that must be free of specific harmful substances and need to offer sufficient defense against potential harm from the sun's ultraviolet A and B, or UVA and UVB, rays.
Consumers deserve access to more sunscreens that offer adequate UVA/UVB protection and aren't made with problematic ingredients, but the FDA needs to act…"
I think we're gonna need a few more years for the FDA to act.
Here is the rating on this specific one. Mixed.
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If I'm not going to the beach, is it fine?