
doi: 10.5070/d3197018969
pmid: 24010515
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has been more proactive in regulating sunscreen products. In 2011, the FDA publicized a set of new requirements for marketing over-the-counter sunscreens in the United States. The primary goal of the new FDA requirements was to provide consumers with a clear understanding of the level of protection actually provided by a sunscreen. Furthermore, information about protection against ultraviolet A radiation, associated with early aging and skin cancer, was to be clarified. With the new regulations, sunscreen products that provide protection against ultraviolet A and ultraviolet B would be allowed to be marketed as broad-spectrum sunscreen [1].
United States Food and Drug Administration, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Medicine, Humans, Product Labeling, Sun Protection Factor, Sunscreening Agents, United States
United States Food and Drug Administration, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Medicine, Humans, Product Labeling, Sun Protection Factor, Sunscreening Agents, United States
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