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Sunglasses Carry Shady UV-Protection Claims, Study Reveals

2010-06-01 10:21:36

Christopher Wanjek

LiveScience's Bad Medicine Columnist

LiveScience.com christopher Wanjek

livescience's Bad Medicine Columnist

livescience.com Mon May 31, 8:12 am ET

Some manufacturers of sunglasses are as shady as the products they offer.

Labeling can be ambiguous concerning the level of UV protection, and even

seemingly straightforward proclamations, such as "100 percent protection," can

be outright false, according a new study.

No trivial concern, the sun's invisible ultraviolet radiation can sunburn your

eyes just as it burns your skin, causing immediate damage and long-term vision

problems, such as cataracts and retinal and macular degeneration.

Yet the sunglass industry is loosely regulated. Should manufacturers get caught

lying about their labeling, their punishment if any would be a tersely worded

letter from the FDA warning them to change their ways.

Consumers have little guarantee that what the protection they think they are

buying is real. The best you can do is to stick to brands from trustworthy

manufacturers, such as those specializing in outdoor gear, and take the

sunglasses to an eye doctor for real testing.

Blinded by the falsehood

Australia is the only country with a law defining suitable sunglass standards.

Sun protection is a serious issue on this island continent, where UV intensity

is at least 15-percent greater than at similar latitudes in the Northern

Hemisphere. That's due to clearer skies and the Earth's closer proximity to the

sun during the summer season from December to March. Skin cancer rates are

among the highest in the world for this largely white population plopped into

these sunny climes as recent as a few hundred years ago.

As relayed in the May 2010 issue of the journal Ophthalmic and Physiological

Optics, researchers from the University of New South Wales in Sydney found that

over 20 percent of the sunglasses made in Europe were falsely labeled, not

meeting stated levels of protection for UV, polarization or other requirements

for the Australian market.

Unfortunately, similar studies testing sunglasses made or sold in the United

States have tended to be small or non-scientific, such as those conducted by

intrepid television news reporters. Yet most of these studies have shown that

labeling is often false and that mislabeling occurs regardless of the price of

the sunglasses, from cheap $15 shades to $400 designer sunglasses.

What to look (out) for

Setting aside the mislabeling issue for the moment, for complete protection,

look for sunglasses offering 99- to 100-percent UV protection. This level

implies 99-percent and 95-percent protection from two types of UV, respectively

- the shorter-wavelength and more damaging UVB and longer-wavelength yet still

menacing UVA - as determined by the American National Standards Institute, a

nongovernmental body.

Terms such as "UV absorbing" or "blocks most UV light" mean nothing; these are

just wiggle words to get around the loose FDA regulations. The term "UV 400"

implies protection against UVB and UVA, filtering light up to the UVA threshold

wavelength of 400 nanometers. But you still need something stating 99- to

100-percent protection in this full range. So-called 100-percent protection

might only apply to a narrow slice of the UV spectrum.

For full protection, wrap-around shades are best. Your 100-percent protection

must be averaged with zero-percent protection if unfiltered light enters in

from the sides.

Polarized lenses reduce glare but offer no additional UV protection. Similarly,

lens darkness means little; darkness is related only to the extent you want to

look like a blind blues musician. You can buy eyeglasses with but a slight tint

offering 100-percent UV protection.

"Blue-blockers" are glasses that go a step further to filter blue-wavelength

visible light, just below ultraviolet radiation on the electromagnetic

spectrum. This might be overkill, but the protection isn't utterly unwarranted.

Scientists remain uncertain whether this near-ultraviolet light is harmful.

Those of us with the greatest sun exposure - skiers and boaters (exposed to

glare bouncing off of snow and water) and pilots - might want this extra level

of protection.

Home testing

Should you be geeky enough to possess a UV laser, you can shine it through your

sunglasses to estimate the level of protection. An eye doctor should have the

equipment to test precisely how much of what wavelength is getting through.

I myself was surprised to find my $15 sunglasses, a big buy for me, offered

less than 50-percent protection. Half protection is worse than no protection,

however. The darkness of my lenses was causing my eyes to dilate and allow even

more UV light to penetrate to the back of my eyeballs. Now I've seen the light.