Hope you enjoyed this video! I think the next one in this series might be debunking product tests on social media... which ones do you keep seeing? Also you can find out more about my book here: geni.us/TheScienceOfBeauty
I really need to know if this video answers “what did Michelle survive in 1996?” I keep trying to look under the screen line, I’m old & tired & the senior living group who came to my work today had the stomach flu… PS I Googled, kinda bummed it’s not real..,
Yay, group therapy with Michelle! As a fellow Australian, it absolutely blows my mind that there are people who don't "believe" in sunscreen. Like, tell me you've never lived somewhere with a UV index above 6 without telling me. My skin would literally be cooked if I used that "animal based" sunscreen with our average UV index of 12 in summer :') I think literally every Australian knows *at least* one person who has had a melanoma or other skin cancer removed at some point, which probably plays a role in our culture around sun protection.
@@AutumnVulpes369 a lot of things will only report it up to 11, and after that just say it's "above 11" because anything 11 or above is considered to be extreme and the exact number doesn't really matter anymore. The UV index going above 11 is also pretty uncommon in most of the northern hemisphere, even in summer. In summer in Australia, though, almost the entire country is at or above 11 every day, so just reporting "at or above 11" would be pretty meaningless for us since it would pretty much say that all the time. In 2021 one of our major cities, Brisbane, recorded a UV index of 15.9. Personally, the highest I've ever seen it get in Sydney is 14, but that doesn't mean it hasn't been higher here. At UV indexes above 11 it only takes about 5 to 10 minutes to get a sunburn, I pretty much never leave the house without sunscreen at least on my face. If you wanna see how high the UV index gets across Australia for pretty much any date you can search for "Arpansa UV index" and it'll take you to a page that has historical and current real time UV data for all major cities in Australia. Keep in mind that our seasons are switched, so summer is December - February here.
I'm from regional Queensland and most people I know don't wear sunscreen, and quite a few even believe it's bad for you or it will give you cancer. Quackery and conspiracy-theories seem to be very ingrained in most people I know (although it's worsened in the last few years).
@@biosparkles9442 no worries about the switched seasons 👍 i used to live in cape town so im pretty used to it still. thanks for the in depth explanation!
@@AutumnVulpes369I think I've been under UV 14 in Mexico. Yes it is hell here 😂 And you can feel the sun just roasting your skin as soon as you step under it. We don't have a sunscreen culture like Australia to use it daily but we often use umbrellas, hats, sunglasses and try to walk in the shade. (I do try to use daily sunscreen and a lot of young people do, but it's been a recent development.)
I don't even tan. I just burn. And as neither that nor skin cancer (I'm a redhead. No such thing as sunscreen season for me as every season is sunscreen season) are all that appealing to me I always make sure to wear SPF50 where my skin is showing. Though I honestly prefer just to cover up as reapplying sunscreen to my entire body every few hours isn't something I am willing to do. Thank god for maxi skirts and dresses. They're lifesavers in summer.
@@DM-nw5lu I'm not a redhead but I'm pretty darned pale/freckly myself and I second that! I lived in Egypt for a few years as well so I always made sure to wear flowy, long sleeved clothes etc.. There was no other way!
Oh my god. I was visiting a southern country and missed a tiny spot on my chest after applying sunscreen. I burnt so badly that it bubbled. It bled and then got infected. I still have the scar 10 years later.
@@stephstevens2 Oh, it definitely goes for all pale ladies. I only mentioned red hair as the MC1R variant responsible for our red hair also increases the risk of skin cancers including melanoma. I barely have freckles anymore as I wear sunscreen religiously.. only some on my arms and hands. My face has been freckle free since a few summers after I started wearing sunscreen. I do kind of miss my face freckles as I always thought they're cute but health trumps cuteness for me.
"I'm standing in direct sunlight right now" . "Nobody gets burned in 20 minutes " yes they do. As a pale blonde who was born and raised in Europe I haven't known what REAL SUN feels like until l traveled to Florida. Europeans have this very lax attitude towards sun safety because the whole continent is very northern, and we aren't really aware of how cold we have it relative to almost everyone else. Even the southern parts like the Mediterranean region get snowy winters. We shouldn't export our sun behavior. Seriously. Let's stay in our lane.
People with dark skin burn and get sun damage from UV as well, it's just not as visually apparent but it happens just as quickly as it does to people with pale skin when the UV index is high. Everyone should be wearing sunscreen on any exposed skin whenever outside, it's the easiest way to prevent UV damage.
Same here. I'm another pale European who moved to the bright US sun (I'm in a desert on the opposite coast from where you are), and I never leave the house without wearing SPF 50+ on all exposed skin during the spring, summer, and fall, because if I don't then I burn in about five minutes. Long sleeves are our friends!
As a currently pregnant lady whose anxiety skyrocketed in pregnancy- thank you. There is so much fear mongering to pregnant women and it’s so scary. You just want to protect your baby who you know is so vulnerable and so small and it starts to feel like nothing is safe- then people tell you that feeling anxious will hurt the baby too and I’ve just felt like I’m failing my baby this whole pregnancy.
I’m not a mother but I am a daughter of a very caring woman. The best moms are the ones that want to do everything right for their baby even if it’s over analyzing everything they do as mother, trying to be perfect. No matter what small mistakes you make because mistakes happen, I can guarantee your baby is happy to have a mother who cares so much for them because not a lot of kids have that. My own mom has made many mistakes with me and my siblings and even now she’s still learning but I wouldn’t ask for another mom. Sorry for the rant but you’re a great mom.
Big hugs OP! 🫂 Just remember if you're ever stressed that you're doing something wrong, that mothers-to-be have somehow managed to keep their babies well enough to grow into healthy and capable adults _without_ all this modern knowledge for literally hundreds of thousands of years. You're doing great! The fact you're concerned at all means you're probably doing more to protect your baby than those a millennia ago who literally didn't have access to most of this information. If they can get through that to produce the generations that became our ancestors, you can do it too. Wishing you all the best! You got this! And know that, even if something does go wrong, it's not your fault. Nature is a chaos machine and we literally cannot control all the variables. People seek to find stuff to blame like saying "sunscreen caused it!" because humans don't like the idea that so much of life is literally just a roll of the dice, and sometimes bad stuff just happens. With all that being said though, I hope the dice roll in your favour and you and your baby both live happy, healthy, well-supported lives! Big hugs from an internet stranger 🫂❤️
I’m an Aussie doctor working in skin cancer. I love, love, love this. Your explanation of the cellular mechanism for sunburn was more detailed than any lecture I’ve ever seen. I will definitely be recommending this video to my patients!
My mom has had skin cancer, so when i saw a brand basically saying SPF causes cancer, i was pretty annoyed. I cannot believe theres so many totally unrealistic myths/rumors about SPF
My mom also had skin cancer. Basically had her whole nose removed then reconstructed. She still doesn’t wear sunscreen and “doesn’t believe SPF is real.” 🙄
Skin cancer is a multifaceted problem, but just so you know blue light or indoor living will stimulate melanocytes more than UV light will. All the big cancers we know about including skin cancer will show low vitamin D in the patients. Work that one out.
@@NickMarshallMusic can i get a source on that first claim? Are you saying that blue light/LED lightbulbs will stimulate melanocytes more than the sun's UV light??
As someone who has oily skin, I can’t imagine how terribly that animal “sunscreen” would make my skin break out. The tradeoffs of using that “sunscreen” are not worth it…
As an organic chemist, I appreciate the more in-depth discussion of the mechanism of sunburn. The phrase 2+2 cycloaddition makes me feel right at home.
After I uploaded I realised I accidentally said "the double bond moves" instead of "the bond moves", I was hoping no one would notice but may as well come clean now 😅
@@Uilani-g4mToday I learned that scientists are not allowed to have leisure time and must work 24/7 or else internet strangers will doubt their job validity
As a white dude in his early twenties who has neglected skincare most of his life, your channel has done a great job in dispelling a lot of the misinformation I used to believe. I used to think sunscreen was the devil but I am no longer afraid to wear it. Thank you!
Skincare is literally diet combined with getting sun exposure on your face. You’ll have perfect skin if you do that. Your skin will only get burned if your diet contains significant amount of linolaic acid and you don’t consume enough animal protein and cholesterol for repair
The sun doesn't age any animal eating It's natural diet. Stop falling victim to people that spread corporate propaganda like this lady. She doesn't look good even when she is hiding behind 2mm of makeup gunk
Same here brother, Theres so much misinformation out there about everything being bad and good that sometimes its hard to believe that, But for me I just realized to focus on what works for me and finding out the things that make me and my skin feel right. Now I use moisturizer and sunscreen but it only took like 20 years lmfaoo
@@DefunctYompelvert Im sorry to inform you, I agree avoiding linolaic acid does help your body but theres a hell of a lot more people in this world with conditions and caveats that makes things complicated, Believe what you want but avoiding all linolaic acid sources is extremely hard for most people with there being not too many easy and cheap healthy food options. Not everyones body is the same but good for you that you found what works perfectly for you. I ate a diet for AIP (Auto Immune Protocol) for close to a year and found out what foods caused me to break out, but there were points while doing that diet my skin broke out for no reason due to my condition. Not everyone is the same and some people have to look and try out different things to find out the best ways to live their life.
@@brandonhernandez1159 Health and nutrition are simple. Don't overcomplicate it with modern labels. Just keep in mind that almost all of the scientists that have no conflict of interest in their research strongly disagree with the bull being spewed out by modern healthcare. Everything can be solved by terrain theory and animal based diet. (It comes from someone who was in your shoes - usually the reason is some accumulated toxicity that gets activated by your environment / the body decides It's a good moment to detox)
A note about the way that titanium dioxide is classified as a carcinogen (at least in the United States). Titanium dioxide is classified as carcinogenic in terms of long term inhalation of fine airborne particulate, usually in industrial settings. It shares this classification with many other materials we consider safe. Things like natural cotton fiber , powdered drink concentrates, bentonite clay, non-dairy coffee creamer, and even things like saw dust and road dirt share the same or similar classification. These are not really for the average consumer to stress over and are mostly for industrial manufacturers as a way to ensure that employees are wearing the correct PPE when dealing with large lingering clouds of these materials.
I was just trying to explain to my husband the other day that just because some things are carcinogenic in some forms, in some combinations, or at some amounts doesn't mean they're always carcinogenic. Also, the carcinogenic rating scale that the WHO uses only rates how likely something is a carcinogen, not the rate at which it increases cancer. So, something that increases cancer rates by 0.5% but has confirmed animal and human studies is a level 1 versus something that has a 50% increase in cancer but with less studies would be a level 2.
Yes, exactly this. It's the dose/amount that makes something dangerous, not the item itself. Water is one of the basic requirements to live but too much can be deadly.
Someone really wrote to you that "he has access to graduate level research studies and clinical trials not released to the public because he's a Stanford professor"? How do they come up with this misinformation? Firstly, Michelle ALSO has access to research that is behind paywalls. But even if she didn't, everyone has access to all peer-reviewed study abstracts - it is just that some journals are annoying and require subscriptions to access some whole articles. AND, if you really want the article, but don't want to pay for it, you just email any of the authors and they will send it to you FOR FREE. Because there is no such thing as "big science". We all want our research to be out there and to get read. When there is a paywall, it isn't our choice, that is just a consequence that we have to suffer to get our studies out there in the right journals. We hate it too.
^^^exactly, and a study with an outcome as sensational (for lack of a better word) would, even if it were not accessible at all, still show up as at least the title&authors in citations of other studies and articles . If somebody really found sunscreen particles in brain matter, tons of people would either reference or respond to that article. Like I think everyone in academia knows this phenomenon, where somebody wrote a controversial or very influential paper and from that point on 90% of publications on the topic cite that one specific paper
"Big science" are the journals with their pay walls despite most often it being public money that funded the research that has gone into the articles. THAT is "big science", it's actually "big science publishing". And while authors may send you the articles they've written, some of us struggle with feeling like we'd be a waste of their time. I felt that way even when I was a uni student, so I RARELY went to office hours cuz I thought I wasn't worth their rarified time and that my smarter classmates that did stand a chance at one day becoming professors deserved it more
A friend of mine has lupus and her rheumatologist told her to only use mineral sunscreen (lupus causes photosensitivity so sunscreen is imperative). When prompted the doctor said it's because she wouldn't have to reapply a mineral sunscreen as often as chemical sunscreen. It's really a shame that, like you said, doctors' misunderstanding of cosmetic science can impact patients skin health, especially for people who are more sensitive. Especially since mineral sunscreen (tend to) suck and you end up using less than what's advisable.
My grandma will always keep my faith that over exposure to the sun is not good for our skin. She’s always diligently used spf never goes out in direct sunlight without a huge sun hat and glasses. She has aged brilliantly at 80 years old. She is often mistaken as my mothers sister despite a 30 year age gap!
I have avoided the sun and used sunscreen since my early 20’s and my sister who is two years older than me was a sunworshiper. She has had multiple skin cancers removed (hands, face, and arms). And I make a point of saying she’s my sister so no one calls her my mother, it would kill her if someone did.
As a lawyer in the US, I find it incredibly hard to believe that sunscreen is so harmful, and there are not class action lawsuits against huge brands. I would think sunscreens have been around long enough for this to be a thing. I can only think of one related to benzene.
Exactly - and it would be hard to believe that the large companies would have legal advice to keep selling these products if there was a real risk of liability.
all this time I thought I was just overly sensitive as a child because I used to hate wearing high spf sunscreen, when in reality they really have gotten less irritating since then
It's wild - when I first started blogging in 2011 I remember it being hard to find a sunscreen over SPF 15 that felt nice! Now my top sunscreen list keeps growing and it's almost all SPF 50+ 😀
I have MCAS had a very hard time with sunscreen until I was 40 and found Korean sunscreen. They all burned my eyes and made they inflamed for many days or ever weeks after. In one year I tried over 35 sunscreens!! Thank TH-cam where I heard about K Beauty sunscreens
As a child I thought it is supposed to burn. As an adult I found out I'm sensitive to Octocrylene and Perfumes. Iam so thankful for new modern sunscreen filters.
Ha ha ha 😂 that’s what I thought. Your « animal » sunscreen (zinc is animal based now?) is not working, my man. Sunscreen is not some cloak of invisibility that lets you bronze but still fights UV.
@@malou1563Try to eat any of the following "elusive 'chemicals'" (because 80% of what is put on your skin ends up being absorbed and is found in the bloodstream: Oxybenzone Avobenzone Butyloctyl Salicylate Cylcopentasiloxane / Cyclomethicone Formaldehyde Diazolidinyl urea Quaternium-15 DMDM Hydantoin Hydroxymethylglycinate Homosalate Methylisothiazolinone Nanoparticles
Can I just say the way you break things down and make arguments is so helpful and has helped the way I respond to ocd anxieties. Listening to your process over and over again is a great influence even though I’ve known the specific information for a couple years and am not too invested in that part.
As a dark skin black woman, ask me if I wear mineral sunscreen lol! The best sunscreen for you is the one you will ACTUALLY wear everyday. Not that ghost chalky mess that will turn my whole family blue and purple.
95% of BIăck Americans have insufficient Vitamin D levels, because our dark skin already acts as a natural sunscreen, and modern western populations are not getting enough sunlight. I don't want to burst the bubble, but unless you're a day laborer, you may want to rethink wearing sunscreen all the time.
Totally agree! 🤗 If a sunscreen feel bad, smells bad or makes your skin look a strange colour, you would stop wearing it no matter how good the reviews. The one you actually wear every day is then simply the best for you instead of wearing no sunscreen at all 🤷♀️
This is a friendly reminder that over 90% of BĪăck Aměricans lack the recommended amount of Vitamin D. Our skin naturally acts as a sunscreen and works against us in cultures where people stay indoors all the time.
@@dfpguitar That is a "bit" misguided. Melanin does help protect against the sun, but it is wise not to overestimate its capabilities. Even deeply dark skinned-people can develop melanoma, or at least sun damage through prolonged exposure. And build tolerance? Against the sun? Unless you have some kind of photosensitivity disease where building tolerance can be recommended for treatment, I don't believe that would be particularly effective or necessary for someone of regular health, unless you mean something else specifically? Good sleep and nutrition are just good things to practice, though.
Once, whilst a nurse was taking my blood, she commented on my skin being very pale and told me to get a tan. She said I'm clearly not getting enough sun exposure and therefore not enough vitamin d. I told her that's just my skin colour and I don't want skin cancer so I'm careful. She said, "yeah, wear sunscreen to protect you against cancer, but you still need a tan." It's true. Medical training doesn't make a person know about every health related thing😅 but it seems to make them think they do.
Nurses are constantly concerned about my skin colour. They think I'm going to pass out any minute I'm like "Hun I just look like this I've been wearing sunscreen since I was a kid"
Same - I'm naturally very, very, very pale and I wear sunscreen religiously since childhood due to having had birthmarks that looked fishy to childhood dermatologist. I heard that I must have anemia or that I "look sick" from nurses so many times I've lost count, often nurses that looked like they have members card for tanning bed salon. And then they look at my birth year, surprised. Why people feel the need to comment on other people's appearance and give advice outside of their scope,I wonder...
Yeah I honestly find it really weird and rude. It's also dangerous advice. I wish experts in the relevant field could directly put them in their place all at once😂 it's ridiculous how bold they are about things they don't actually know about...
My sister-in-law, a nurse, still uses a tanning bed. And is anti-vaccine. So do not base health decisions only on the role of the speaker. It helps me to look at greed as a reason for outrageous statements. Difficult to assess the true expertise of the speaker also. What we truly need is better science education.
molecular biologist here - I had no what the actual molecular mechanism was for sunburn beyond generic "DNA damage" until today. Every day is a school day and I am a very happu little nerd to have learnt this!
It's the type of fat you consume. Unsaturated seed/vegetable oils, especially the refined once!! are to blame. Only consume saturated fat, especially ruminant animal fat that's rich in A,D,E,K and gradual sun exposure to build up tolerance ❤🌞Also don't wear sunglasses - that's the quickest way to get red and irritated skin. Everything is connected and only needs natural ingredients to thrive
The increase of skin cancer could be for tons of reasons like the ozone depletion, tanning beds, more recreational activities, higher populations in more sunny areas, longer lives, better healthcare, more access to healthcare, etc
I think a lot of it has to do with the ozone depletion, caused by industrial pollution, and local environmental pollution and stress which can contribute to health issues including cancers. And anything that can impact your immune system could cause skin issues which make you more vulnerable to UVA and UVB. And yeah, some places have worse sun than others. But historically ozone depletion has gotten worse over time.
People spend less time in the sun than ever. Skin cancer is is very likely due to exposure to the chemicals in industrial sunscreen. The pharma industry is the largest funder of: -academic research -media -medical organizations -politicians. Chronic disease is a multi-trillion dollar industry. Whatever good information is available is not going to come from conventional information streams for this reason.
I believe one factor could be our diets too but I might be wrong. Just kinda gut feeling speculation not much to back it up but I do know the foods we eat today are worst and far more industrialized than ever before.
After watching your review on Korean sunscreens I purchased Isntree Hyaluronic Acid Watery Sun Gel SPF 50+ and Beauty of Joseon SPF 50+. WOW. America has it all wrong! These sunscreens are so lightweight and because they don't cause me to break out I don't mind wearing SPF during the winter or while indoors. Thanks for having our back, front and all the bits between!
I've heard that the melanomas that kill us don't usually arise in places the sun would be hitting Still wearing my sunscreen even indoors cuz I'm combatting dark spots that would come back if I didn't, I'm not looking for excuses to not wear sunscreen, I'm just saying that sunscreen preventing skin cancer might not be as straightforward as we've been telling each other
I got melanoma at 21 and wore sunscreen religiously at the time. I changed my diet, wear sunscreen far less, and never found another sign of melanoma after 22 years. I increased red meat significantly. I now also don't eat seed oils.
People that have never been to Australia don’t even know that one could get sunburned in literally 10 min outside - go to Queensland and then you’ll start wearing 50++++ in your home with the blinds down 😂👌🏻
Michelle! Watching this while applying my morning sunscreen! My dad dealt with metastatic melanoma and died in '22 from metastatic carcinoma which originated in his lungs (not a smoker, possibly from second-hand smoke exposure in childhood). He was only 59. He was treated for years and suffered for years from two preventable cancers. He also grew up in a time where he would lather baby oil and coconut oil all over his body and lay out for hours. I cannot tell you how much I appreciate your spf and sunscreen videos. I know this is probably exhausting and redundant to you, but your work is so appreciated! Btw, I just pre-ordered your book. Thank you!❤
Here in Sweden we have a woman called Johanna Gillbro who has a doctorate in experimental and clinical dermatology and is one of Sweden's leading skin experts. She talks a lot about how many sunscreens have hormonal disrupting ingredients and should be avoided. She is an expert in skincare and is a doctor and scientist. It is really hard to know these days who to trust. Every scientist and expert says different things.
Part of the problem is a lot of research has been extremely low quality. That is because it's hard to study humans while maintaining control of confounders. Most of the research on this kind of topic are epidemological and correlative. Such research is useful for formulating hypotheses but they are useless for proving conclusions. On a positive note, the replication crisis has forced more awareness in the scientific community and so the quality of research has been improving. In any case, you always need to be skeptical and look into the research for yourself. Even this video has some questionable claims. As another commenter said, "I went to the blog you linked in the description as debunking the "seed oils are bad" position. It didn't check out. The major meta-analysis cited by that blog flat out concluded that there was no all-cause mortality benefit to replacing saturated fat with other dietary elements." It's easy for people to make strong claims.
I think it's pretty simple. The skin is your biggest organ, and it absorbs things easily. For example, there was a scientist who died because she got a drop of methyl mercury on her latex glove. A few micro grams leaked through her glove and on to her skin and over a period of many months, the organic mercury settled into her tissues and she died of organ failure. So here's the deal. I'd much rather wear UV protection clothing and sweat a little more than put on sunscreen. It's just like bug spray. There's 0% chance you can read that label and think there's not something that could harm you if used repeatedly overtime. I never put sunscreen on my face because I always wear a large hat in the summer. I'm not saying never use sunscreen again but my point is that sunscreen doesn't need to be used if you wear UV clothes. So it's very easy to minimize the amount of times you need to use it.
i have a sun sensitivity, lady i DO get burned in 20 min direct sun even with SPF 50+ on a UV rating of 4+ usually not on 3 and below ut sunscreen at UV rating 2+ is a MUST for me. commenting to promote your content, love your videos!
I may be wrong but I don't think medical school requires you to write a thesis like other stem graduate degrees. So I guess it's possible that he's good at memorizing for exams but not at critical thinking when it comes to scientific research 😅
She has never once claimed to be a Dermatologist. She made a whole video speaking on her credentials and showed her diploma. Don't know why Michelle said this...
@@AricaMichellewell Doctor V has claimed multiple, lets says, dermatological statements in the pasts that are not true, like the one in the video. She also doesnt like chemical sunscreen because of that news about going into tje blood stream, and she also believes in the comedogenic rating. 😅
DIY sun protection: hats, long sleeves and pants or especially coverage on places that get a lot of direct sunlight. I started wearing long sleeved bathing suits and tights. Helps keep me warmer when swimming but also great sun protection with a hat
That dramatic re-enactment “Tim, put down your flap” with the black and white filter, squinting, and pauses in between each Tim just TOOK ME OUT. What a masterpiece, Michelle.
That's how everything works though. And when they do find out how harmful things are, they lie for another 50 years to keep profits intact. Have you been living in a cave?
@@Wonderlandish Yet, humans and the sun have co-existed for millions of years with no issue. Without the sun all life would cease to exist. Still people would rather be stupid than think for themselves.
@@Uilani-g4m yeah, and people from sunnier areas have a literal halo of hair and melanin to protect us from sun damage, and funny enough, more melanated people clearly age slower. Plus most generations until this one, and most cultures who aren't so melanated have used hats to shield themselves from the sun on a common basis, even in places with lower UVA rates. So indeed, people would rather be stupid than think, stat. Wouldn't take much to realize this without even reading a single article with actual research, but it seems either your grass-touching is overdue or you're just a real good troll, user 123
If you told me in my 20s that I'd be sooooo excited to watch a 45-minute video on sunscreen science in my 40s, I absolutely wouldn't believe you. But here we are! Love the debunking so we can all take it to people in our lives who repeat things like this that they've heard and continue to share solid information with people we care about. Thank you, Michelle!
I’m 19 and I love watching her videos😂 I’ve been wearing sunscreen on and off since 16 as recommended by a doctor following an epiduo prescription for acne, and consistently since 17years old. It’s crazy to see that people “don’t believe” in sunscreen… I try to get everyone my age to wear it!
girl im so proud of you i remember subscribing to you years ago when you first made this channel and I KNEW your channel would take off because you are so knowledgeable and explain complex topics in a way that is easy to understand at any scientific background level
Thank you thank you thank you for this video. Sometimes I think people who don’t “believe” in scientifically proven things like sunscreen just want to be contrarian for no good reason. You’re amazing Michelle, keep up the good work!
The major problem is people speaking outside their expertise. Huberman has been called out on this so many times but his following are cultish and believe everything he says. They’re at risk for getting burned and even skin cancer. He himself looks significantly older. He’s only 48, but he looks a decade older with leathery wrinkled skin of a 65 year old. He shouldn’t be speaking outside his expertise. He’s profiting by fear mongering.
Believing someone is right about everything because they were right about a bunch of things is the real problem. Anyone with decent parents probably gave them "life changing advice" at some point, but no one even listens to their parents about everything.
I’m annoyed that Huberman leans on his credentials as a Stanford Medicine professor, when he doesn’t teach and his “lab” nowadays is just one or two researchers who he mostly ignores. It took that New York Magazine exposé to bring that to light, although the focus ended up being on his sketchy dating practices. Crap like this discredits the legit work that the rest of Stanford Medicine faculty and researchers are doing.
@@catc8927Mind sharing where I can find that exposé on? (as in keywords). I used to listen to his podcasts about sleep so I was fascinated with his content.
That woman who says nobody burns in twenty minutes in direct sunlight needs to explain how I have burned in less than that time on a partly overcast spring day in Scotland (not exactly a high UV hotspot and I have the complexion of someone adapted to Northern Europe.
i'm from a nordic country living in QLD australia. it's trivially easy to burn in 5 minutes or less. zinc sunscreen is the only way i can exist outside when the sun is bad.
I've never burned in india. But also, I'm an introvert who rarely leaves her house 😅 I am the only person in my department who wears sunscreen and I've been teased about it but IDC I'm 30 and i don't wanna get skin cancer or look too old 😭
As someone who could be considered an expert in a field, you'll notice a real expert because they immediately caveat what they say and the limits of their expertise even in their field. It's actually a problem in science communication because lay people see this reticence for absolutes as though we're unsure.
It is so fucking exhausting how over the past 10 years we've globally adopted this culture of "everyone's wrong and my criticisms are useful because I can use Google".
Actually the exact opposite is true. When "experts" give unequivocal advice about a topic where a lot of uncertaintly exists and they turn out to be wrong, THAT is when they lose public trust. *cough cough, you know like pretty much everything related to the pandemic, all kinds of health interventions and food
Doing the work of the people 🙏🏼 I’m an esthetician and your content is my favorite for how researched and in depth it is; I always learn more and look forward to buying your book!
Sometimes i wonder how some of these charlatans sleep at night. Do they completely buy into their own BS? Do they know that they're spreading dangerous lies? I honestly don't know which is worse.
Yes, they sleep like babies. It's possible when u don't hav a conscience. U wudnt believe how happy ppl can be while conning others, until u actually come across one such person.
Reminds me of some scammer who constantly talks about medbeds xD keeps saying it’ll heal everything and you don’t need to go to the doctors or hospital at all. So people with cancer aren’t getting treatment because they believe some quackadoodle. And if people call her out or people who listen then ended up super sick almost died from listening to her advice. They literally get blocked and comments are deleted… she literally is killing people and stealing money from these people… tf
Agree all of this misinformation make my brain hurt and im tired of all of this misinformation being spread especially if it perpetuating by someone who isn't educated of how things works
I’m European and guilty of not using sunscreen on a daily basis. Sunscreen causing cancer, imbalances women’s hormones and preventing from getting a tan bc the sun isn’t that strong in Europe were the reasons why I used coconut oil as a sunscreen bc so many blogger, influencer and people said it’s healthier than sunscreen. But everything you explained makes so much sense. I ordered my first spf 50 now 😄 thank you for debunking those things
I think it's easier for Europeans to fall for those tricks than people who live in very sunny areas. I live in South Africa, growing up my mom used to wear coconut oil to help her tan more, now she has to get melanoma lazered off that are a result of years of coconut oil tanning. I'm a woman and don't expereince any hormonal issues with sun screen, if it makes you break out it could just be too thick for your skin instead of messing with hormones. Take it from someone who has to live with the sun at its harshest, if you're planning on being in the sun all day - wear sunscreen!
@@AmeliaMastervally *North europeans, or otherwise non-mediterranean europeans. OP saying "the sun isn't strong" is a dead give away that they live in northern areas lol I guarantee you, italians, spaniards, greeks, portuguese etc have to wear sunscreen otherwise we get burned to a crisp, because in summer and spring the sun is pretty strong and it will fry ppl alive if they cover themselves with some untested crap. I see loads of german and british tourists coming here in Italy, thinking that the climate is the same as in their countries, and going away red like a lobster lmao
@@AmeliaMastervally yes it was very easy to fall for the tricks also I didn’t really get out of my way to educate myself on it I just believed what was being said here. Later on in my life I really thought sunscreen is more dangerous for my skin than the sun itself. My skin was constantly burnt in the summertime. Now I know better thanks for the advice & for sharing. I hope and wish for your Mum to be healthy and safe 🙏
0:41 Somebody said it last time but I'm not gonna trust the sunscreen recipe of someone who currently has a sunburn, and whose skin looks like beef jerky
I cannot describe to you how much i love these videos, but i can see the life and patience draining from your eyes from how many times you've had to explain these things...
Michelle! It's so good to watch you address some of these, I really appreciate your approach, and it's lead me to be a mich Korean science minded consumer.
"Lineoleic acid is bad for you." It's literally one of only TWO essential fatty acids, and arguably the more essential of the two. Fail on skincare *and* nutrition for the man who rubs a weird snack on his skin.
@@juliamanning2658 "biochemistry shmiochemistry, i'm on a fad diet and have anecdotal claims" edit to add: literally all fats oxidize. it'd be bad if they didn't.
It does appear to be quite bad for you, yes, mainly in the excessive quantities that are obtained in modern diets. Obviously humans need a small amount of Omega-6 but that low threshold is met while actively avoiding seed oils and linoleic acid in foods.
I did find one valuable thing about homemade sunblock. WAIT, DON'T RUN. I live in Seattle, where the sun is weak for most of the year. Several years back, I decided to add some zinc oxide to my everyday lotion, just so I had some basic protection on my arms/neck/shoulders while walking to work. (I wear real sunblock when I'm out for long, don't worry.) And...my skin was really happy about it. Surprising happy. Turns out I have a zinc deficiency. (I take it as a supplement now.)
@@No-ky3kb Mostly I remember that insect bites and acne healed really slowly, and I was prone to some sort of mild eczema or keratosis pilaris. Taking zinc isn't a miracle cure for all of that, but I have experienced a noticeable improvement.
Inositol was a literal lifesaver for my previously debilitating periods - just sharing in case anyone else is reading this & hasn't heard of it. You can find it in stuff like wheatgerm but taking a pill has helped me so much (along with maintaining my vitamin D and iron levels).
I take it for MS. It's been 30 years now and, not only do I have no Iil effects from it, my MS has not progressed WHATSOEVER. I am 51, fully ambulatory and haven't had a relapse in over 2 decades. I hate these people.
I am IN LOVE with all this Scientific information and I can see your passion for educating us nerds shine through in these videos, love love love that I found your channel! Thank you for all your care and work for us 😊
Thanks for debunking these myths and digging into the details. I have had a lot of intuitions similar to the myths over the years and your detailed analyses are the content I’ve always needed
I used to avoid wearing sunscreen because of all these myths or “reasons to not wear sunscreen,” until I got a questionable mole removed. After that, I decided that even if all these things about sunscreen were true, I would hate getting melanoma even more. It’s crazy to me that there are actually people like Huberman, who weigh their fear of sunscreen at the same level as skin cancer. It’s unfortunate that misinformation about sunscreen is so prevalent and in turn, that’s causing people to either use sunscreen incorrectly or avoid it altogether.
Girl, I've watched your channel for some years now. And you are still CRIMINALLY UNDERRATED!!! The amount of Skincare Knowledge and Scientific research you bring to your videos is astounding. Just watching the part about Huberman and the people telling you that you don't do enough research which is so ironic. Your work is great and I didn't even know you wrote a book, so already on my way to order it!
Your analogy about avoiding refrigerators because you don't like dial-up internet is making me periodically chuckle to myself, seemingly out of nowhere, like a crazy person. Thanks for that 😂
I’ve been a fan and listener of Huberman for many years, but that doesn’t mean that he cannot be wrong. I don’t understand peoples emotional reactions just because they are a fan. Everyone makes mistakes, nobody’s perfect, and we don’t have to treat things we like as if we’ve joined a cult. So thank you LabMuffin! This was super helpful for me to have a rational and analytical approach to these claims.
YES. Thank you for being a warrior for actual science and critical thinking. Please keep pushing that boulder up the hill, we need knowledgable people to push back against baseless claims and fear-based misinformation.
I am extra annoyed with him for tarnishing Stanford Medicine’s good name in the process. There are dozens of hard working legit non-quacks there who are now indirectly associated with this very public quack.
Of all the off-the-rails scientists out there, he's been by far the most disappointing, and continues to be. The most infuriating thing about is that he is still very much aware how to sound like a scientist (i.e. being careful to appear moderate, reference peer review and studies, etc.), and has avoided cultivating a red-flag bombastic persona. This is what makes his BS even more impactful.
@@MissMovies29yes I did. He said ‘certain sunscreens’ (NOT ALL). And he is most likely referring to old sunscreens from the 80s as they would be the only ones that could have been tested after 10 years. He didn’t make any crazy claim in this video? Also, he was the only one in this video that didn’t. So question remains, do you have any example where he has said anything fraudulent or obviously wrong?
I drove myself mad trying to find reefsafe sunscreen that I liked and would wear... (I got an insane allergic reaction to one of the mineral ones that supposedly was great for sensitive skin) I just wanna do the right thing and help preserve nature so its kind of a bummer that it doesn't really make a difference
@@LabMuffinBeautyScience That same annoyance you have to be patient with (out of respect) when hearing your loved one watch fear-driven claims, and instead have to trust their ability to assess the information. 😄 I am glad you are using that energy to create these informative videos that our friends may find and make the better decision.
Just wanted to say a massive thank you for recommending the neutrogena zinc stick for sting prone eyes. I’m 29 and finally have found something that works on my eyelids and under eye areas without issue! Only wish I found it sooner but now use it religiously. Thank you so much!
Thank you for bringing to my attention what Hubberman said 😮 I am actually a Neuroscientist, and I always found the way Huberman present "facts' a bit weird. I always feel suspicious when people are too certain about something, that is not how science works. But, I thought it was okay, maybe it was a just my impression. But now hearing that he doesn't wear sunscreen, I cannot take him seriously anymore.
@@esvedra2419IIRC it's more nuanced .. more about the light in the eyes setting the body's biorhythm /endocrine system & melatonin production/sleep ...
As a black person, sunscreen or not I get darker under the sun! When I go to the beach and apply my sunscreens every 2 hours , the parts of my body that are out get double darker and my skin return to normal color after around 4 to 6 months 😢!!! So do I even bother apply sunscreen? Don’t tell me I got the run sunscreen!!!! I used mineral and chemical and try a bunch of them!!! Same results all the time!
It's likely because of visible light: th-cam.com/video/Rr4p6hC2ewc/w-d-xo.html You'd need a tinted sunscreen, or shade/protective clothing. Your skin would likely be darker if you didn't have sunscreen at all though!
I’ve followed you for so long now but never commented on any of your videos. Brilliant content. I always look forward to the myth debunking videos especially. Also pretty cool how you guys had sunscreen awareness in school and the little stories you spin into your explanations. I preordered your book a month or two ago and cannot wait for it to arrive in July!
I'm going to start an apprenticeship as a Gardener in September and I'm really glad you uploaded this! I'm not prone to conspiracy thinking about sunscreen (of all things) but as someone who is from Western Europe and usually spends a lot of time indoors, I definitely don't wear enough sunscreen. Luckily my (soon to be) place of work is really rigorous with applying sunscreen, drinking water and wearing hats
Dr. Huberman disappointed me a long time ago. I’m a researcher with a terminal degree. I stay in my lane, and I respect other researchers who stay in their lanes. Influencer culture is dangerous when it’s irresponsible. Thank you for continuing to share responsible, peer-reviewed evidence.
As a scientist myself I can only speak to my area of expertise and defer to others for theirs. And even then I still don’t claim to know everything in my area. As I say to other people that I train, I am still learning new things every day as science progresses every day! I believe arrogance in any scientist is a major red flag 🚩
@@zannabondesson2544 , yes! I’ve learned a lot from him sharing information related to his specific field, but I’ve heard him share misinformation about other fields more than once. I’m afraid people may view him as an expert and then internalize everything he shares.
@@sunshine5777 , absolutely! We learn new things every day and must be careful to stay current in our fields and practice care when sharing information not related to our specific field.
I'm careful just about what I say in normal conversation and I'm still studying, it's just that among my friends and family I've become the “science one” so people tend to believe what I say, and a lot of the time people misinterpret me when I'm trying to joke. I feel like surely everyone who has pursued a career in science must have had this kinda experience so how can that not make you careful about what you say!
Michelle, your videos are always a delight. It's very cathartic to see you addressing misinformation. You actually inspired me to become a chemist myself! On a completely unrelated note, I must know what you're wearing on your lips, it looks stunning.
"Avoiding sunscreens because of tryclosanes would be like avoiding refridgerators because you don't like dial-up internet - it's not around anymore, and was never in that thing in the first place" 😂
The same people who focus on cosmetics being unhealthy for our bodies turn a blind eye to oil spills being bad for our planet. Thank you for this therapy session Michelle!
The sunscreen during pregnancy thing absolutely drives me mad - it's such an emotionally fraught time, and when you're told you MUST use sunscreen because your skin is more sensitive, but you're also receiving the message all over the place that sunscreen is dangerous and will harm your baby, the outcome is inevitably that a percentage of pregnant women will either get burnt, or stop going outside altogether. My sister refused to wear any spf during pregnancy and she has a scientific background, so it can strike anyone.
People consciously preying on first time mothers wanting to do the best thing for their baby deserve jail time. We really ought to fight misinformation as not only it causes harm, but incidences of restrictive eating disorders and OCD are increasing as well. Fearmongering makes people paranoid and unsure whom they can trust due to strategies used by people using fear to make money. It's despicable.
Don't stop going outside altogether, but if you avoid going outside between 10AM and 4PM you are not very likely to get burned (edit: and avoiding some fruits like citrus helps a lot too)
I made sunscreen exactly once…I got sunburned within half an hour. Lesson learned. I lost an older friend to melanoma two years ago. She beat every expectation by living for sixteen years with stage IV melanoma. But it was brutal, and she suffered a lot. Margaret had a message for everyone at her funeral, delivered by her daughter: Wear sunscreen. Always.
I'm SICK of Andrew Huberman. He's constantly getting promoted by youtube and I'm not gonna listen to his opinions and recommendations on literally anything and everything just because he's an expert in one thing.
Honestly I don't think he is asking anyone to stop using sunscreen he just he doesn't cuz he found molecules in neurones. Ppl can think for themselves right? Am still gonna use sunscreen lol😂
I tried to rebuke you in all caps and then put emojis 1 through 10 afterwards, but I got auto-flagged as spam. You're lucky youtube hates and crimps my style.
TH-cam knows things… I haven’t looked up anything relating to sunburns or sunscreen, yet I went out on a boat yesterday and burned the heck out of myself. Now, I’ve seen several videos talking about sunburns and sunscreen that I wouldn’t normally have on my feed..
Michelle!! As a pharmacist and someone interested in skincare and skin health, I HUGELY appreciate your evidence-based, contextually-appropriate takedowns! Subscribed and I can’t wait to watch the rest of your work ❤
I don't think it's just overexposure to the sun, but his appearance has changed drastically over the last few years. I believe he had health problems that triggered his switch from carnivore to "animal-based"...
Saladino eats tons of fruit. His diet is extremely high-carb. That contributes to inflammation. And excess, chronic inflammation would compromise skin healing.
And no one ever talks about the falls in other diagnoses as we either got better at diagnosing things or treating them. Like the rise in autism diagnoses coincides with a fall in schizophrenia diagnoses because it used to be the case that basically everything got diagnosed as schizophrenia. Similarly rising cancer rates coincides with a fall in deaths from infectious diseases because when people stopped dying of turbecolosis they started living long enough to die from cancer instead.
@@hedgehog3180I hear the word "tuberculosis" and a little John Green pops up in the back of my head 😂 But yes, would be great to actually eliminate tuberculosis worldwide rather than just in rich countries. Let's make sure everybody is able to survive this curable disease so they can live long enough to die of something else! Preferably many decades later after having lived a full and happy life! 😊
WRONG. Everyone is getting chronically ill, depressed, anxious, or obese nowadays. Are you blind or something? People like you are the cause of why no one is genuinely investigating ROOT CAUSES instead of researching bandaid symptom reducers.
WRONG. Age-corrected cancer has also increased. Wake up instead of blindly believing you need modern technology to stay healthy, you freak. The Maasai often live into their 100s without medicine.
At 15:20, it is truly remarkable how a scientist such as Michelle can maintain her composure when someone is misinterpreting correlation/causality in such a clear manner. Well done hahah 😉
Hope you enjoyed this video! I think the next one in this series might be debunking product tests on social media... which ones do you keep seeing?
Also you can find out more about my book here: geni.us/TheScienceOfBeauty
Hi lab muffin! Thank u for all the information, as always. The info about reef safety was really helpful. 🌻🌻
What do you think about edible sunscreen?
can you please talk about what to do after shaving my beard? I have a lot
I'm.a chemistry phd in WA and i love your work!
I really need to know if this video answers “what did Michelle survive in 1996?” I keep trying to look under the screen line, I’m old & tired & the senior living group who came to my work today had the stomach flu… PS I Googled, kinda bummed it’s not real..,
Yay, group therapy with Michelle!
As a fellow Australian, it absolutely blows my mind that there are people who don't "believe" in sunscreen. Like, tell me you've never lived somewhere with a UV index above 6 without telling me. My skin would literally be cooked if I used that "animal based" sunscreen with our average UV index of 12 in summer :')
I think literally every Australian knows *at least* one person who has had a melanoma or other skin cancer removed at some point, which probably plays a role in our culture around sun protection.
omg i thought the UV ended at 11 💀
@@AutumnVulpes369 a lot of things will only report it up to 11, and after that just say it's "above 11" because anything 11 or above is considered to be extreme and the exact number doesn't really matter anymore. The UV index going above 11 is also pretty uncommon in most of the northern hemisphere, even in summer.
In summer in Australia, though, almost the entire country is at or above 11 every day, so just reporting "at or above 11" would be pretty meaningless for us since it would pretty much say that all the time.
In 2021 one of our major cities, Brisbane, recorded a UV index of 15.9. Personally, the highest I've ever seen it get in Sydney is 14, but that doesn't mean it hasn't been higher here. At UV indexes above 11 it only takes about 5 to 10 minutes to get a sunburn, I pretty much never leave the house without sunscreen at least on my face.
If you wanna see how high the UV index gets across Australia for pretty much any date you can search for "Arpansa UV index" and it'll take you to a page that has historical and current real time UV data for all major cities in Australia. Keep in mind that our seasons are switched, so summer is December - February here.
I'm from regional Queensland and most people I know don't wear sunscreen, and quite a few even believe it's bad for you or it will give you cancer. Quackery and conspiracy-theories seem to be very ingrained in most people I know (although it's worsened in the last few years).
@@biosparkles9442 no worries about the switched seasons 👍 i used to live in cape town so im pretty used to it still. thanks for the in depth explanation!
@@AutumnVulpes369I think I've been under UV 14 in Mexico. Yes it is hell here 😂 And you can feel the sun just roasting your skin as soon as you step under it.
We don't have a sunscreen culture like Australia to use it daily but we often use umbrellas, hats, sunglasses and try to walk in the shade. (I do try to use daily sunscreen and a lot of young people do, but it's been a recent development.)
When I don't use high sunscreen, I tan and burn. When I do, I don't. 😮. You don't have to be a genius to figure out that suncreen works.
It's like these people have never missed a spot...
I don't even tan. I just burn. And as neither that nor skin cancer (I'm a redhead. No such thing as sunscreen season for me as every season is sunscreen season) are all that appealing to me I always make sure to wear SPF50 where my skin is showing. Though I honestly prefer just to cover up as reapplying sunscreen to my entire body every few hours isn't something I am willing to do. Thank god for maxi skirts and dresses. They're lifesavers in summer.
@@DM-nw5lu I'm not a redhead but I'm pretty darned pale/freckly myself and I second that! I lived in Egypt for a few years as well so I always made sure to wear flowy, long sleeved clothes etc.. There was no other way!
Oh my god. I was visiting a southern country and missed a tiny spot on my chest after applying sunscreen. I burnt so badly that it bubbled. It bled and then got infected. I still have the scar 10 years later.
@@stephstevens2 Oh, it definitely goes for all pale ladies. I only mentioned red hair as the MC1R variant responsible for our red hair also increases the risk of skin cancers including melanoma. I barely have freckles anymore as I wear sunscreen religiously.. only some on my arms and hands. My face has been freckle free since a few summers after I started wearing sunscreen. I do kind of miss my face freckles as I always thought they're cute but health trumps cuteness for me.
"I'm standing in direct sunlight right now" . "Nobody gets burned in 20 minutes " yes they do. As a pale blonde who was born and raised in Europe I haven't known what REAL SUN feels like until l traveled to Florida. Europeans have this very lax attitude towards sun safety because the whole continent is very northern, and we aren't really aware of how cold we have it relative to almost everyone else. Even the southern parts like the Mediterranean region get snowy winters. We shouldn't export our sun behavior. Seriously. Let's stay in our lane.
Fr not all skin tone is resistance to sun some skin burn easily than other
People with dark skin burn and get sun damage from UV as well, it's just not as visually apparent but it happens just as quickly as it does to people with pale skin when the UV index is high. Everyone should be wearing sunscreen on any exposed skin whenever outside, it's the easiest way to prevent UV damage.
I knew someone who could burn in 10 minutes in a car. It's so different for everyone.
I am brown and I still got burned easily and I turn into dark chocolate and flaky for days.
Same here. I'm another pale European who moved to the bright US sun (I'm in a desert on the opposite coast from where you are), and I never leave the house without wearing SPF 50+ on all exposed skin during the spring, summer, and fall, because if I don't then I burn in about five minutes. Long sleeves are our friends!
As a currently pregnant lady whose anxiety skyrocketed in pregnancy- thank you. There is so much fear mongering to pregnant women and it’s so scary. You just want to protect your baby who you know is so vulnerable and so small and it starts to feel like nothing is safe- then people tell you that feeling anxious will hurt the baby too and I’ve just felt like I’m failing my baby this whole pregnancy.
I’m not a mother but I am a daughter of a very caring woman. The best moms are the ones that want to do everything right for their baby even if it’s over analyzing everything they do as mother, trying to be perfect. No matter what small mistakes you make because mistakes happen, I can guarantee your baby is happy to have a mother who cares so much for them because not a lot of kids have that. My own mom has made many mistakes with me and my siblings and even now she’s still learning but I wouldn’t ask for another mom. Sorry for the rant but you’re a great mom.
Big hugs OP! 🫂
Just remember if you're ever stressed that you're doing something wrong, that mothers-to-be have somehow managed to keep their babies well enough to grow into healthy and capable adults _without_ all this modern knowledge for literally hundreds of thousands of years. You're doing great! The fact you're concerned at all means you're probably doing more to protect your baby than those a millennia ago who literally didn't have access to most of this information. If they can get through that to produce the generations that became our ancestors, you can do it too.
Wishing you all the best! You got this!
And know that, even if something does go wrong, it's not your fault. Nature is a chaos machine and we literally cannot control all the variables. People seek to find stuff to blame like saying "sunscreen caused it!" because humans don't like the idea that so much of life is literally just a roll of the dice, and sometimes bad stuff just happens.
With all that being said though, I hope the dice roll in your favour and you and your baby both live happy, healthy, well-supported lives! Big hugs from an internet stranger 🫂❤️
❤❤❤
relax, everything willl be fine. :) as a dad: look forward to your little one and enjoy every step.
It's amazing to me the most natural, instinctual thing on the planet, pregnancy and eating that humans don't know how to do it.
I’m an Aussie doctor working in skin cancer. I love, love, love this. Your explanation of the cellular mechanism for sunburn was more detailed than any lecture I’ve ever seen. I will definitely be recommending this video to my patients!
My mom has had skin cancer, so when i saw a brand basically saying SPF causes cancer, i was pretty annoyed. I cannot believe theres so many totally unrealistic myths/rumors about SPF
My best friends mom died from skincancer thwt eventually soread. She wax only 35 years old and left behind two young duaghters. Horrible.
My mom also had skin cancer. Basically had her whole nose removed then reconstructed. She still doesn’t wear sunscreen and “doesn’t believe SPF is real.” 🙄
@@sugarplumcarlysame with mine!
Skin cancer is a multifaceted problem, but just so you know blue light or indoor living will stimulate melanocytes more than UV light will. All the big cancers we know about including skin cancer will show low vitamin D in the patients. Work that one out.
@@NickMarshallMusic can i get a source on that first claim? Are you saying that blue light/LED lightbulbs will stimulate melanocytes more than the sun's UV light??
I can imagine if you use the DIY sunscreen all the neighbourhood dogs will flock to you like a suburban Disney Princess
🤣🤣🤣
SUBURBAN DISNEY PRINCESS! 😭🤣🤣🤣🤣
And then the flies after the food oils go rancid 😮
As someone who has oily skin, I can’t imagine how terribly that animal “sunscreen” would make my skin break out. The tradeoffs of using that “sunscreen” are not worth it…
real
As an organic chemist, I appreciate the more in-depth discussion of the mechanism of sunburn. The phrase 2+2 cycloaddition makes me feel right at home.
After I uploaded I realised I accidentally said "the double bond moves" instead of "the bond moves", I was hoping no one would notice but may as well come clean now 😅
Amazing an "organic chemist" has time to make comments on youtube. Slow day doing "research?"
@@Uilani-g4mToday I learned that scientists are not allowed to have leisure time and must work 24/7 or else internet strangers will doubt their job validity
As a white dude in his early twenties who has neglected skincare most of his life, your channel has done a great job in dispelling a lot of the misinformation I used to believe. I used to think sunscreen was the devil but I am no longer afraid to wear it. Thank you!
Skincare is literally diet combined with getting sun exposure on your face. You’ll have perfect skin if you do that. Your skin will only get burned if your diet contains significant amount of linolaic acid and you don’t consume enough animal protein and cholesterol for repair
The sun doesn't age any animal eating It's natural diet. Stop falling victim to people that spread corporate propaganda like this lady. She doesn't look good even when she is hiding behind 2mm of makeup gunk
Same here brother, Theres so much misinformation out there about everything being bad and good that sometimes its hard to believe that, But for me I just realized to focus on what works for me and finding out the things that make me and my skin feel right. Now I use moisturizer and sunscreen but it only took like 20 years lmfaoo
@@DefunctYompelvert Im sorry to inform you, I agree avoiding linolaic acid does help your body but theres a hell of a lot more people in this world with conditions and caveats that makes things complicated, Believe what you want but avoiding all linolaic acid sources is extremely hard for most people with there being not too many easy and cheap healthy food options. Not everyones body is the same but good for you that you found what works perfectly for you.
I ate a diet for AIP (Auto Immune Protocol) for close to a year and found out what foods caused me to break out, but there were points while doing that diet my skin broke out for no reason due to my condition. Not everyone is the same and some people have to look and try out different things to find out the best ways to live their life.
@@brandonhernandez1159 Health and nutrition are simple. Don't overcomplicate it with modern labels. Just keep in mind that almost all of the scientists that have no conflict of interest in their research strongly disagree with the bull being spewed out by modern healthcare. Everything can be solved by terrain theory and animal based diet. (It comes from someone who was in your shoes - usually the reason is some accumulated toxicity that gets activated by your environment / the body decides It's a good moment to detox)
A note about the way that titanium dioxide is classified as a carcinogen (at least in the United States). Titanium dioxide is classified as carcinogenic in terms of long term inhalation of fine airborne particulate, usually in industrial settings. It shares this classification with many other materials we consider safe. Things like natural cotton fiber , powdered drink concentrates, bentonite clay, non-dairy coffee creamer, and even things like saw dust and road dirt share the same or similar classification. These are not really for the average consumer to stress over and are mostly for industrial manufacturers as a way to ensure that employees are wearing the correct PPE when dealing with large lingering clouds of these materials.
facts that clean beauty lobbyists such as the ewg conveniently ignore 🫠
I was just trying to explain to my husband the other day that just because some things are carcinogenic in some forms, in some combinations, or at some amounts doesn't mean they're always carcinogenic. Also, the carcinogenic rating scale that the WHO uses only rates how likely something is a carcinogen, not the rate at which it increases cancer. So, something that increases cancer rates by 0.5% but has confirmed animal and human studies is a level 1 versus something that has a 50% increase in cancer but with less studies would be a level 2.
Yes, exactly this. It's the dose/amount that makes something dangerous, not the item itself. Water is one of the basic requirements to live but too much can be deadly.
Someone really wrote to you that "he has access to graduate level research studies and clinical trials not released to the public because he's a Stanford professor"? How do they come up with this misinformation? Firstly, Michelle ALSO has access to research that is behind paywalls. But even if she didn't, everyone has access to all peer-reviewed study abstracts - it is just that some journals are annoying and require subscriptions to access some whole articles. AND, if you really want the article, but don't want to pay for it, you just email any of the authors and they will send it to you FOR FREE. Because there is no such thing as "big science". We all want our research to be out there and to get read. When there is a paywall, it isn't our choice, that is just a consequence that we have to suffer to get our studies out there in the right journals. We hate it too.
^^^exactly, and a study with an outcome as sensational (for lack of a better word) would, even if it were not accessible at all, still show up as at least the title&authors in citations of other studies and articles . If somebody really found sunscreen particles in brain matter, tons of people would either reference or respond to that article.
Like I think everyone in academia knows this phenomenon, where somebody wrote a controversial or very influential paper and from that point on 90% of publications on the topic cite that one specific paper
as if research groups would do experiments for fun and not have them published 😆
"Big science" are the journals with their pay walls despite most often it being public money that funded the research that has gone into the articles. THAT is "big science", it's actually "big science publishing". And while authors may send you the articles they've written, some of us struggle with feeling like we'd be a waste of their time. I felt that way even when I was a uni student, so I RARELY went to office hours cuz I thought I wasn't worth their rarified time and that my smarter classmates that did stand a chance at one day becoming professors deserved it more
Also, students have access to additional articles too?? At least usually
Sci-hub is literally there lol
A friend of mine has lupus and her rheumatologist told her to only use mineral sunscreen (lupus causes photosensitivity so sunscreen is imperative). When prompted the doctor said it's because she wouldn't have to reapply a mineral sunscreen as often as chemical sunscreen. It's really a shame that, like you said, doctors' misunderstanding of cosmetic science can impact patients skin health, especially for people who are more sensitive. Especially since mineral sunscreen (tend to) suck and you end up using less than what's advisable.
@user-lp5ci9bi2j that's terrible. But I'm glad the lupus foundation website exists, it's a great resource
"They don't *look* like they care about skincare" 9:10
Oh, Michelle's coming for blood in this one 😂
This was the most nicely worded take... 😅
Honestly a valid take, if someone is very tan I assume they don't care about their skin at all.
Yes, it’s always people with thin villainous lips and rampant sun damage who say sunscreen is “toxic”
@@9090lillypadvillainous lips😂 so trueeee
I was thinking the same thing. Like, maybe he should stop EATING IT and put it on😂😂😂😂
My grandma will always keep my faith that over exposure to the sun is not good for our skin. She’s always diligently used spf never goes out in direct sunlight without a huge sun hat and glasses. She has aged brilliantly at 80 years old. She is often mistaken as my mothers sister despite a 30 year age gap!
I have avoided the sun and used sunscreen since my early 20’s and my sister who is two years older than me was a sunworshiper. She has had multiple skin cancers removed (hands, face, and arms). And I make a point of saying she’s my sister so no one calls her my mother, it would kill her if someone did.
As a lawyer in the US, I find it incredibly hard to believe that sunscreen is so harmful, and there are not class action lawsuits against huge brands. I would think sunscreens have been around long enough for this to be a thing. I can only think of one related to benzene.
Exactly - and it would be hard to believe that the large companies would have legal advice to keep selling these products if there was a real risk of liability.
all this time I thought I was just overly sensitive as a child because I used to hate wearing high spf sunscreen, when in reality they really have gotten less irritating since then
Same. That Johnson's & Johnson's sunscreen burned the hell outta my skin and my mom thought I was just being whiny and difficult and kept buying it.
It's wild - when I first started blogging in 2011 I remember it being hard to find a sunscreen over SPF 15 that felt nice! Now my top sunscreen list keeps growing and it's almost all SPF 50+ 😀
I have MCAS had a very hard time with sunscreen until I was 40 and found Korean sunscreen. They all burned my eyes and made they inflamed for many days or ever weeks after. In one year I tried over 35 sunscreens!! Thank TH-cam where I heard about K Beauty sunscreens
YES. I thought that's what it was supposed to feel like 😭
As a child I thought it is supposed to burn. As an adult I found out I'm sensitive to Octocrylene and Perfumes. Iam so thankful for new modern sunscreen filters.
11:30
Maybe the sun won't burn you but Michelle sure will 😭
I cackled, thank you😂
It's true though, I haven't seen any who don't have some bizarre stuff going on 😩
Yeeees 👏🏽👏🏽😂
I came to the comments section just to show appreciation for Michelle’s definition of « holistic ».
It’s funny cause it’s true.
Bada-dummm 😅
Just remember, if the person talking about sunscreen has burnt orange elephant skin...
Probably dont pay them attention
Ha ha ha 😂 that’s what I thought. Your « animal » sunscreen (zinc is animal based now?) is not working, my man. Sunscreen is not some cloak of invisibility that lets you bronze but still fights UV.
Are you talking about Donald Drump?
@@SR-mv2mfha ha ha orange man bad lol like love how you spelled his last name w a D 😂 epic own
@@ghostoflazloyou seem upset
i was going to say 😭
As a melanated person whose uncle died due to skin cancer, i will never quit telling people to wear sunscreen!!!!
Why drive if we increase our chances of death?
The chemical exposure and rancid oils got you there, not the sun
@@vcvcvcvcvc Right. The elusive ‘chemicals’ 🤣
@@malou1563Try to eat any of the following "elusive 'chemicals'" (because 80% of what is put on your skin ends up being absorbed and is found in the bloodstream:
Oxybenzone
Avobenzone
Butyloctyl Salicylate
Cylcopentasiloxane / Cyclomethicone
Formaldehyde
Diazolidinyl urea
Quaternium-15
DMDM Hydantoin
Hydroxymethylglycinate
Homosalate
Methylisothiazolinone
Nanoparticles
Can I just say the way you break things down and make arguments is so helpful and has helped the way I respond to ocd anxieties. Listening to your process over and over again is a great influence even though I’ve known the specific information for a couple years and am not too invested in that part.
As a dark skin black woman, ask me if I wear mineral sunscreen lol!
The best sunscreen for you is the one you will ACTUALLY wear everyday. Not that ghost chalky mess that will turn my whole family blue and purple.
95% of BIăck Americans have insufficient Vitamin D levels, because our dark skin already acts as a natural sunscreen, and modern western populations are not getting enough sunlight.
I don't want to burst the bubble, but unless you're a day laborer, you may want to rethink wearing sunscreen all the time.
Totally agree! 🤗 If a sunscreen feel bad, smells bad or makes your skin look a strange colour, you would stop wearing it no matter how good the reviews. The one you actually wear every day is then simply the best for you instead of wearing no sunscreen at all 🤷♀️
This is a friendly reminder that over 90% of BĪăck Aměricans lack the recommended amount of Vitamin D.
Our skin naturally acts as a sunscreen and works against us in cultures where people stay indoors all the time.
Lmao Im a pale white boy and it still makes me look like im dying and need a blood transfusion 😂 I still wear it though but I gotta spread it out well
@@dfpguitar That is a "bit" misguided. Melanin does help protect against the sun, but it is wise not to overestimate its capabilities. Even deeply dark skinned-people can develop melanoma, or at least sun damage through prolonged exposure.
And build tolerance? Against the sun? Unless you have some kind of photosensitivity disease where building tolerance can be recommended for treatment, I don't believe that would be particularly effective or necessary for someone of regular health, unless you mean something else specifically?
Good sleep and nutrition are just good things to practice, though.
Once, whilst a nurse was taking my blood, she commented on my skin being very pale and told me to get a tan. She said I'm clearly not getting enough sun exposure and therefore not enough vitamin d.
I told her that's just my skin colour and I don't want skin cancer so I'm careful. She said, "yeah, wear sunscreen to protect you against cancer, but you still need a tan."
It's true. Medical training doesn't make a person know about every health related thing😅 but it seems to make them think they do.
Nurses are constantly concerned about my skin colour. They think I'm going to pass out any minute I'm like "Hun I just look like this I've been wearing sunscreen since I was a kid"
Same - I'm naturally very, very, very pale and I wear sunscreen religiously since childhood due to having had birthmarks that looked fishy to childhood dermatologist. I heard that I must have anemia or that I "look sick" from nurses so many times I've lost count, often nurses that looked like they have members card for tanning bed salon. And then they look at my birth year, surprised.
Why people feel the need to comment on other people's appearance and give advice outside of their scope,I wonder...
Yeah I honestly find it really weird and rude. It's also dangerous advice. I wish experts in the relevant field could directly put them in their place all at once😂 it's ridiculous how bold they are about things they don't actually know about...
Nurses aren’t great regarding diet or skincare.
My sister-in-law, a nurse, still uses a tanning bed. And is anti-vaccine. So do not base health decisions only on the role of the speaker. It helps me to look at greed as a reason for outrageous statements. Difficult to assess the true expertise of the speaker also. What we truly need is better science education.
molecular biologist here - I had no what the actual molecular mechanism was for sunburn beyond generic "DNA damage" until today. Every day is a school day and I am a very happu little nerd to have learnt this!
People also forget that tanning beds were a big thing in the 2000s and it increases your chance of skin cancer.
Pretty sure it only does if you overdo it. That being said, 99% of people I know who use the tanning beds definitely overdo it😂
@@therealnerdyneuronUsing tanning beds still ages your skin even with moderate use.
It's the type of fat you consume. Unsaturated seed/vegetable oils, especially the refined once!! are to blame. Only consume saturated fat, especially ruminant animal fat that's rich in A,D,E,K and gradual sun exposure to build up tolerance ❤🌞Also don't wear sunglasses - that's the quickest way to get red and irritated skin. Everything is connected and only needs natural ingredients to thrive
@@timothyrockwell2638 agreed but people somehow often think that going in the sun is somehow less damaging
@@vcvcvcvcvc wtf have sunglasses to do with getting irritated skin?
The increase of skin cancer could be for tons of reasons like the ozone depletion, tanning beds, more recreational activities, higher populations in more sunny areas, longer lives, better healthcare, more access to healthcare, etc
I think a lot of it has to do with the ozone depletion, caused by industrial pollution, and local environmental pollution and stress which can contribute to health issues including cancers. And anything that can impact your immune system could cause skin issues which make you more vulnerable to UVA and UVB. And yeah, some places have worse sun than others. But historically ozone depletion has gotten worse over time.
People spend less time in the sun than ever. Skin cancer is is very likely due to exposure to the chemicals in industrial sunscreen. The pharma industry is the largest funder of: -academic research -media -medical organizations -politicians. Chronic disease is a multi-trillion dollar industry. Whatever good information is available is not going to come from conventional information streams for this reason.
@@PrometheanFlame I do too. That's probably the number one reason
I believe one factor could be our diets too but I might be wrong. Just kinda gut feeling speculation not much to back it up but I do know the foods we eat today are worst and far more industrialized than ever before.
@@2nerC9 who knows. Might have something to do with it.
After watching your review on Korean sunscreens I purchased Isntree Hyaluronic Acid Watery Sun Gel SPF 50+ and Beauty of Joseon SPF 50+. WOW. America has it all wrong! These sunscreens are so lightweight and because they don't cause me to break out I don't mind wearing SPF during the winter or while indoors. Thanks for having our back, front and all the bits between!
K beauty sunscreens are the best - nothing compares in my opinion
I literally use the BoJ as MOISTURIZER. It’s that nice! 🤓
@@ambergerhelper7852oh, you rich rich 😏
and boj doesn’t sting your eyes!!
My friend died from melanoma aged 34 and a friend’s sister died aged 32. I have many friends who have had skin cancers removed. Just wear sunscreen.
Oh how sad! I’m so sorry to hear that.
I've heard that the melanomas that kill us don't usually arise in places the sun would be hitting
Still wearing my sunscreen even indoors cuz I'm combatting dark spots that would come back if I didn't, I'm not looking for excuses to not wear sunscreen, I'm just saying that sunscreen preventing skin cancer might not be as straightforward as we've been telling each other
I got melanoma at 21 and wore sunscreen religiously at the time. I changed my diet, wear sunscreen far less, and never found another sign of melanoma after 22 years. I increased red meat significantly. I now also don't eat seed oils.
@@NoOctopussWere you stressed ? Or had a traumatic event before the diagnosis ?
@Kwildcat13 unless you live in a vacuum, everything around you is a chemical...
People that have never been to Australia don’t even know that one could get sunburned in literally 10 min outside - go to Queensland and then you’ll start wearing 50++++ in your home with the blinds down 😂👌🏻
Australia had me wearing spf 75 on overcast days 😭
australia sun is brutal just like the wildlife in there 😂
It's d same in india, d tropical overhead sun, d heat, d humidity n water scarcity is a deadly cocktail
@@coffee_2234Australia wants people 💀
Tasmania is surprisingly bad! It's usually cold, but your skin feels strangely painful...
Michelle! Watching this while applying my morning sunscreen!
My dad dealt with metastatic melanoma and died in '22 from metastatic carcinoma which originated in his lungs (not a smoker, possibly from second-hand smoke exposure in childhood). He was only 59. He was treated for years and suffered for years from two preventable cancers. He also grew up in a time where he would lather baby oil and coconut oil all over his body and lay out for hours. I cannot tell you how much I appreciate your spf and sunscreen videos. I know this is probably exhausting and redundant to you, but your work is so appreciated! Btw, I just pre-ordered your book. Thank you!❤
Here in Sweden we have a woman called Johanna Gillbro who has a doctorate in experimental and clinical dermatology and is one of Sweden's leading skin experts. She talks a lot about how many sunscreens have hormonal disrupting ingredients and should be avoided. She is an expert in skincare and is a doctor and scientist. It is really hard to know these days who to trust. Every scientist and expert says different things.
Part of the problem is a lot of research has been extremely low quality. That is because it's hard to study humans while maintaining control of confounders. Most of the research on this kind of topic are epidemological and correlative. Such research is useful for formulating hypotheses but they are useless for proving conclusions. On a positive note, the replication crisis has forced more awareness in the scientific community and so the quality of research has been improving.
In any case, you always need to be skeptical and look into the research for yourself. Even this video has some questionable claims. As another commenter said, "I went to the blog you linked in the description as debunking the "seed oils are bad" position. It didn't check out. The major meta-analysis cited by that blog flat out concluded that there was no all-cause mortality benefit to replacing saturated fat with other dietary elements." It's easy for people to make strong claims.
The person to trust is the person who has not been indoctrinated by the American education system.
I think it's pretty simple. The skin is your biggest organ, and it absorbs things easily. For example, there was a scientist who died because she got a drop of methyl mercury on her latex glove. A few micro grams leaked through her glove and on to her skin and over a period of many months, the organic mercury settled into her tissues and she died of organ failure. So here's the deal. I'd much rather wear UV protection clothing and sweat a little more than put on sunscreen. It's just like bug spray. There's 0% chance you can read that label and think there's not something that could harm you if used repeatedly overtime. I never put sunscreen on my face because I always wear a large hat in the summer. I'm not saying never use sunscreen again but my point is that sunscreen doesn't need to be used if you wear UV clothes. So it's very easy to minimize the amount of times you need to use it.
Click bait video...there are way worse sunscreen Info out there
Newsflash: sunscreen does protect from the sun but in return it affects your hormones .
i have a sun sensitivity, lady i DO get burned in 20 min direct sun even with SPF 50+ on a UV rating of 4+ usually not on 3 and below ut sunscreen at UV rating 2+ is a MUST for me. commenting to promote your content, love your videos!
Thank you! ❤
how on earth did that man make it all the way through medical school with no interest in science?
His medical degree is in psychiatry.
@@maryeckel9682every md goes through the same med school as any other medical doctor. You graduate, get your your title, and then specialize.
I also wouldn’t trust his “homemade” formula given how tanned and dry aged his skin looks
I may be wrong but I don't think medical school requires you to write a thesis like other stem graduate degrees. So I guess it's possible that he's good at memorizing for exams but not at critical thinking when it comes to scientific research 😅
@@BreakofDawn speaks for itself, melanoma here i come
“She’s a doctor not a dermatologist this time” 😂😂😂 pick me up off the floor LOL
She has never once claimed to be a Dermatologist. She made a whole video speaking on her credentials and showed her diploma. Don't know why Michelle said this...
@@AricaMichellewell Doctor V has claimed multiple, lets says, dermatological statements in the pasts that are not true, like the one in the video. She also doesnt like chemical sunscreen because of that news about going into tje blood stream, and she also believes in the comedogenic rating. 😅
@@AricaMichelleI always thought she was a dermatologist until this video. I think Dr V is a little misleading.
@@AricaMichelleI took it to mean that a lot of the doctors she reacts to are dermatologists, rather than another discipline
DIY sun protection: hats, long sleeves and pants or especially coverage on places that get a lot of direct sunlight.
I started wearing long sleeved bathing suits and tights. Helps keep me warmer when swimming but also great sun protection with a hat
Yes, good idea.
But not everyone likes it that hot. Some people sweat. 😉
I'm sure all this gets old at some point, but thank you so much for constantly speaking out against false information!
That dramatic re-enactment “Tim, put down your flap” with the black and white filter, squinting, and pauses in between each Tim just TOOK ME OUT. What a masterpiece, Michelle.
i feel like i’ve been transported back to primary school honestly LMAO 😭
21:08 typical fearmongering rhetoric: "nobody can say the effects after 50 years, so it must be bad."
So real. And meanwhile we DO know the damage the sun does if we’re exposed to it for 50 years 😭 still people would rather cling onto the imaginary
This is how I feel about people who are scared of toothpaste too.
That's how everything works though. And when they do find out how harmful things are, they lie for another 50 years to keep profits intact. Have you been living in a cave?
@@Wonderlandish Yet, humans and the sun have co-existed for millions of years with no issue. Without the sun all life would cease to exist. Still people would rather be stupid than think for themselves.
@@Uilani-g4m yeah, and people from sunnier areas have a literal halo of hair and melanin to protect us from sun damage, and funny enough, more melanated people clearly age slower. Plus most generations until this one, and most cultures who aren't so melanated have used hats to shield themselves from the sun on a common basis, even in places with lower UVA rates. So indeed, people would rather be stupid than think, stat. Wouldn't take much to realize this without even reading a single article with actual research, but it seems either your grass-touching is overdue or you're just a real good troll, user 123
If you told me in my 20s that I'd be sooooo excited to watch a 45-minute video on sunscreen science in my 40s, I absolutely wouldn't believe you. But here we are! Love the debunking so we can all take it to people in our lives who repeat things like this that they've heard and continue to share solid information with people we care about. Thank you, Michelle!
I’m 19 and I love watching her videos😂 I’ve been wearing sunscreen on and off since 16 as recommended by a doctor following an epiduo prescription for acne, and consistently since 17years old.
It’s crazy to see that people “don’t believe” in sunscreen… I try to get everyone my age to wear it!
@@LeilalareinaGood for you! It will help so much, and I hope your friends listen to you…then they’ll thank you later!
girl im so proud of you i remember subscribing to you years ago when you first made this channel and I KNEW your channel would take off because you are so knowledgeable and explain complex topics in a way that is easy to understand at any scientific background level
Thank you thank you thank you for this video. Sometimes I think people who don’t “believe” in scientifically proven things like sunscreen just want to be contrarian for no good reason. You’re amazing Michelle, keep up the good work!
The major problem is people speaking outside their expertise. Huberman has been called out on this so many times but his following are cultish and believe everything he says. They’re at risk for getting burned and even skin cancer. He himself looks significantly older. He’s only 48, but he looks a decade older with leathery wrinkled skin of a 65 year old. He shouldn’t be speaking outside his expertise. He’s profiting by fear mongering.
Believing someone is right about everything because they were right about a bunch of things is the real problem. Anyone with decent parents probably gave them "life changing advice" at some point, but no one even listens to their parents about everything.
I’m annoyed that Huberman leans on his credentials as a Stanford Medicine professor, when he doesn’t teach and his “lab” nowadays is just one or two researchers who he mostly ignores.
It took that New York Magazine exposé to bring that to light, although the focus ended up being on his sketchy dating practices.
Crap like this discredits the legit work that the rest of Stanford Medicine faculty and researchers are doing.
It's all about money... controversys bring more attention an money.
@catc8927 so was he never a professor there or?
@@catc8927Mind sharing where I can find that exposé on? (as in keywords). I used to listen to his podcasts about sleep so I was fascinated with his content.
That woman who says nobody burns in twenty minutes in direct sunlight needs to explain how I have burned in less than that time on a partly overcast spring day in Scotland (not exactly a high UV hotspot and I have the complexion of someone adapted to Northern Europe.
i'm from a nordic country living in QLD australia. it's trivially easy to burn in 5 minutes or less. zinc sunscreen is the only way i can exist outside when the sun is bad.
I've never burned in india. But also, I'm an introvert who rarely leaves her house 😅 I am the only person in my department who wears sunscreen and I've been teased about it but IDC I'm 30 and i don't wanna get skin cancer or look too old 😭
As someone who could be considered an expert in a field, you'll notice a real expert because they immediately caveat what they say and the limits of their expertise even in their field. It's actually a problem in science communication because lay people see this reticence for absolutes as though we're unsure.
It is so fucking exhausting how over the past 10 years we've globally adopted this culture of "everyone's wrong and my criticisms are useful because I can use Google".
Actually the exact opposite is true. When "experts" give unequivocal advice about a topic where a lot of uncertaintly exists and they turn out to be wrong, THAT is when they lose public trust.
*cough cough, you know like pretty much everything related to the pandemic, all kinds of health interventions and food
@@jonnynice8366 Sounds more like you already made up your mind on what you want to be true and based your view of the world on it.
@@hedgehog3180 lol, no. I actually enjoy nothing more than changing my mind based on evidence and logic.
Doing the work of the people 🙏🏼 I’m an esthetician and your content is my favorite for how researched and in depth it is; I always learn more and look forward to buying your book!
Every time I watch one of your videos, I'm flabbergasted that you don't have a million followers yet. Thank you for such an in-depth breakdown!
"You need violence to do that. " 😂
Animal-based should be called violence-based or cruelty based.
Vegan people gonna have a field day with that one
Sometimes i wonder how some of these charlatans sleep at night. Do they completely buy into their own BS? Do they know that they're spreading dangerous lies? I honestly don't know which is worse.
Probably. Considering most of them look like beef jerky.
Yes, they sleep like babies. It's possible when u don't hav a conscience. U wudnt believe how happy ppl can be while conning others, until u actually come across one such person.
@@xyz-jv9df god, if I found out I took money from someone under false pretenses I'd never sleep again
I imagine they focus on the money lol
Reminds me of some scammer who constantly talks about medbeds xD keeps saying it’ll heal everything and you don’t need to go to the doctors or hospital at all. So people with cancer aren’t getting treatment because they believe some quackadoodle. And if people call her out or people who listen then ended up super sick almost died from listening to her advice. They literally get blocked and comments are deleted… she literally is killing people and stealing money from these people… tf
Thank you for this video. The misinformation I have seen about sunscreen and summer skincare is rampant and dangerous.
Agree all of this misinformation make my brain hurt and im tired of all of this misinformation being spread especially if it perpetuating by someone who isn't educated of how things works
THANK GOD for this channel🙏. In the age of social media, misinformation is just everywhere. SUBSCRIBED.
I’m European and guilty of not using sunscreen on a daily basis. Sunscreen causing cancer, imbalances women’s hormones and preventing from getting a tan bc the sun isn’t that strong in Europe were the reasons why I used coconut oil as a sunscreen bc so many blogger, influencer and people said it’s healthier than sunscreen.
But everything you explained makes so much sense. I ordered my first spf 50 now 😄 thank you for debunking those things
I think it's easier for Europeans to fall for those tricks than people who live in very sunny areas. I live in South Africa, growing up my mom used to wear coconut oil to help her tan more, now she has to get melanoma lazered off that are a result of years of coconut oil tanning. I'm a woman and don't expereince any hormonal issues with sun screen, if it makes you break out it could just be too thick for your skin instead of messing with hormones. Take it from someone who has to live with the sun at its harshest, if you're planning on being in the sun all day - wear sunscreen!
@@AmeliaMastervally *North europeans, or otherwise non-mediterranean europeans. OP saying "the sun isn't strong" is a dead give away that they live in northern areas lol
I guarantee you, italians, spaniards, greeks, portuguese etc have to wear sunscreen otherwise we get burned to a crisp, because in summer and spring the sun is pretty strong and it will fry ppl alive if they cover themselves with some untested crap.
I see loads of german and british tourists coming here in Italy, thinking that the climate is the same as in their countries, and going away red like a lobster lmao
@@AmeliaMastervally yes it was very easy to fall for the tricks also I didn’t really get out of my way to educate myself on it I just believed what was being said here. Later on in my life I really thought sunscreen is more dangerous for my skin than the sun itself. My skin was constantly burnt in the summertime. Now I know better thanks for the advice & for sharing. I hope and wish for your Mum to be healthy and safe 🙏
"I ordered my first spf 50 now" - are you insane?
@eye1dry138 but the damage is cumulative. Even if the signs of cell damage are not obvious, it’s still happening.
I've never been to Australia nor worn one of those hats, but that teacher screaming at Tim really got me
Every school has a little shit called Tim!
I laughed out loud! So good!
@@LabMuffinBeautyScience Also lets give credit to the flaps joke! You are my new favourite you-tuber ;)
0:41 Somebody said it last time but I'm not gonna trust the sunscreen recipe of someone who currently has a sunburn, and whose skin looks like beef jerky
Word
I cannot describe to you how much i love these videos, but i can see the life and patience draining from your eyes from how many times you've had to explain these things...
Michelle! It's so good to watch you address some of these, I really appreciate your approach, and it's lead me to be a mich Korean science minded consumer.
"Lineoleic acid is bad for you."
It's literally one of only TWO essential fatty acids, and arguably the more essential of the two. Fail on skincare *and* nutrition for the man who rubs a weird snack on his skin.
Pufas oxidize. Saturated fat does not. Since being ketovore I never burn in the sun anymore. Eating seed oils makes you burn.
@@juliamanning2658
"biochemistry shmiochemistry, i'm on a fad diet and have anecdotal claims"
edit to add: literally all fats oxidize. it'd be bad if they didn't.
It does appear to be quite bad for you, yes, mainly in the excessive quantities that are obtained in modern diets. Obviously humans need a small amount of Omega-6 but that low threshold is met while actively avoiding seed oils and linoleic acid in foods.
@juliamanning2658 Ever heard of cognitive bias?
@@juliamanning2658everything oxidizes, stoopid.
I did find one valuable thing about homemade sunblock. WAIT, DON'T RUN.
I live in Seattle, where the sun is weak for most of the year. Several years back, I decided to add some zinc oxide to my everyday lotion, just so I had some basic protection on my arms/neck/shoulders while walking to work. (I wear real sunblock when I'm out for long, don't worry.)
And...my skin was really happy about it. Surprising happy.
Turns out I have a zinc deficiency. (I take it as a supplement now.)
Happy how?
@@No-ky3kb Mostly I remember that insect bites and acne healed really slowly, and I was prone to some sort of mild eczema or keratosis pilaris. Taking zinc isn't a miracle cure for all of that, but I have experienced a noticeable improvement.
All the conspiritualists being so scared of linoleic acid, meanwhile I eat it as a supplement for my PMS.
I used to take an omega blend with evening primrose oil in it, it helped my KP!
Inositol was a literal lifesaver for my previously debilitating periods - just sharing in case anyone else is reading this & hasn't heard of it. You can find it in stuff like wheatgerm but taking a pill has helped me so much (along with maintaining my vitamin D and iron levels).
I take it for MS. It's been 30 years now and, not only do I have no Iil effects from it, my MS has not progressed WHATSOEVER. I am 51, fully ambulatory and haven't had a relapse in over 2 decades.
I hate these people.
This comment is metal af
I am IN LOVE with all this Scientific information and I can see your passion for educating us nerds shine through in these videos, love love love that I found your channel! Thank you for all your care and work for us 😊
Thanks for debunking these myths and digging into the details. I have had a lot of intuitions similar to the myths over the years and your detailed analyses are the content I’ve always needed
I used to avoid wearing sunscreen because of all these myths or “reasons to not wear sunscreen,” until I got a questionable mole removed. After that, I decided that even if all these things about sunscreen were true, I would hate getting melanoma even more. It’s crazy to me that there are actually people like Huberman, who weigh their fear of sunscreen at the same level as skin cancer. It’s unfortunate that misinformation about sunscreen is so prevalent and in turn, that’s causing people to either use sunscreen incorrectly or avoid it altogether.
Girl, I've watched your channel for some years now. And you are still CRIMINALLY UNDERRATED!!! The amount of Skincare Knowledge and Scientific research you bring to your videos is astounding. Just watching the part about Huberman and the people telling you that you don't do enough research which is so ironic. Your work is great and I didn't even know you wrote a book, so already on my way to order it!
Your analogy about avoiding refrigerators because you don't like dial-up internet is making me periodically chuckle to myself, seemingly out of nowhere, like a crazy person. Thanks for that 😂
I’ve been a fan and listener of Huberman for many years, but that doesn’t mean that he cannot be wrong. I don’t understand peoples emotional reactions just because they are a fan. Everyone makes mistakes, nobody’s perfect, and we don’t have to treat things we like as if we’ve joined a cult.
So thank you LabMuffin! This was super helpful for me to have a rational and analytical approach to these claims.
YES. Thank you for being a warrior for actual science and critical thinking. Please keep pushing that boulder up the hill, we need knowledgable people to push back against baseless claims and fear-based misinformation.
Huberman is constantly making ridiculous claims. It's extremely disheartening to see the number of people he's taking advantage of.
I am extra annoyed with him for tarnishing Stanford Medicine’s good name in the process. There are dozens of hard working legit non-quacks there who are now indirectly associated with this very public quack.
Of all the off-the-rails scientists out there, he's been by far the most disappointing, and continues to be. The most infuriating thing about is that he is still very much aware how to sound like a scientist (i.e. being careful to appear moderate, reference peer review and studies, etc.), and has avoided cultivating a red-flag bombastic persona. This is what makes his BS even more impactful.
He is one of the few that actually knows what he talks about. Do you have any examples of falsehoods?
Mika did you watch the video you commented on
@@MissMovies29yes I did. He said ‘certain sunscreens’ (NOT ALL). And he is most likely referring to old sunscreens from the 80s as they would be the only ones that could have been tested after 10 years. He didn’t make any crazy claim in this video? Also, he was the only one in this video that didn’t.
So question remains, do you have any example where he has said anything fraudulent or obviously wrong?
Omg reef safe sunscreen being a myth is crazy! Thanks for debunking lol
I drove myself mad trying to find reefsafe sunscreen that I liked and would wear... (I got an insane allergic reaction to one of the mineral ones that supposedly was great for sensitive skin)
I just wanna do the right thing and help preserve nature so its kind of a bummer that it doesn't really make a difference
Thank you ma'am for stoping misinformation from spreading by spiting nothing but facts on how things work
My pleasure! The annoyance fuels me 😂
@@LabMuffinBeautyScience That same annoyance you have to be patient with (out of respect) when hearing your loved one watch fear-driven claims, and instead have to trust their ability to assess the information. 😄 I am glad you are using that energy to create these informative videos that our friends may find and make the better decision.
Honestly thank GOODNESS you exist Michelle, thank you for your content and educating us!💚
The sweet voice of reason... Thank you Michelle.
Just wanted to say a massive thank you for recommending the neutrogena zinc stick for sting prone eyes. I’m 29 and finally have found something that works on my eyelids and under eye areas without issue! Only wish I found it sooner but now use it religiously. Thank you so much!
You go girl. Huberman takedown: not going out of your way to do it; not going out of your way to avoid it. Perfectly done.
Thank you for bringing to my attention what Hubberman said 😮 I am actually a Neuroscientist, and I always found the way Huberman present "facts' a bit weird. I always feel suspicious when people are too certain about something, that is not how science works. But, I thought it was okay, maybe it was a just my impression. But now hearing that he doesn't wear sunscreen, I cannot take him seriously anymore.
From my memory he suggested to get exposed to early sun for the purpose of vit D synthesis, not so much frying in the sun without sunscreen
@@esvedra2419 You can also just take vitamin supplements though.
@@hedgehog3180 vitamin D supplements are often poorly absorbed, you can take highest dose and still be deficient.
You had feelings about his presentation style and now will dismiss his work because he doesn't wear sunscreen. LOL
@@esvedra2419IIRC it's more nuanced .. more about the light in the eyes setting the body's biorhythm /endocrine system & melatonin production/sleep ...
As a black person, sunscreen or not I get darker under the sun! When I go to the beach and apply my sunscreens every 2 hours , the parts of my body that are out get double darker and my skin return to normal color after around 4 to 6 months 😢!!! So do I even bother apply sunscreen?
Don’t tell me I got the run sunscreen!!!! I used mineral and chemical and try a bunch of them!!! Same results all the time!
It's likely because of visible light: th-cam.com/video/Rr4p6hC2ewc/w-d-xo.html You'd need a tinted sunscreen, or shade/protective clothing. Your skin would likely be darker if you didn't have sunscreen at all though!
I’ve followed you for so long now but never commented on any of your videos. Brilliant content. I always look forward to the myth debunking videos especially. Also pretty cool how you guys had sunscreen awareness in school and the little stories you spin into your explanations. I preordered your book a month or two ago and cannot wait for it to arrive in July!
I'm going to start an apprenticeship as a Gardener in September and I'm really glad you uploaded this! I'm not prone to conspiracy thinking about sunscreen (of all things) but as someone who is from Western Europe and usually spends a lot of time indoors, I definitely don't wear enough sunscreen. Luckily my (soon to be) place of work is really rigorous with applying sunscreen, drinking water and wearing hats
Dr. Huberman disappointed me a long time ago. I’m a researcher with a terminal degree. I stay in my lane, and I respect other researchers who stay in their lanes. Influencer culture is dangerous when it’s irresponsible. Thank you for continuing to share responsible, peer-reviewed evidence.
agreed. i wish he would stick to his specific area of study, especially when so many people listen to his podcast and happen upon his clips
As a scientist myself I can only speak to my area of expertise and defer to others for theirs. And even then I still don’t claim to know everything in my area. As I say to other people that I train, I am still learning new things every day as science progresses every day! I believe arrogance in any scientist is a major red flag 🚩
@@zannabondesson2544 , yes! I’ve learned a lot from him sharing information related to his specific field, but I’ve heard him share misinformation about other fields more than once. I’m afraid people may view him as an expert and then internalize everything he shares.
@@sunshine5777 , absolutely! We learn new things every day and must be careful to stay current in our fields and practice care when sharing information not related to our specific field.
I'm careful just about what I say in normal conversation and I'm still studying, it's just that among my friends and family I've become the “science one” so people tend to believe what I say, and a lot of the time people misinterpret me when I'm trying to joke. I feel like surely everyone who has pursued a career in science must have had this kinda experience so how can that not make you careful about what you say!
"they don't look like they're into skincare" that was such a nasty read, Michelle I'm laughing my a off 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
You and Dr Dray calling this crap out, I hate when people make crap up just because. I need to buy your book ASAP.
Michelle, your videos are always a delight. It's very cathartic to see you addressing misinformation. You actually inspired me to become a chemist myself! On a completely unrelated note, I must know what you're wearing on your lips, it looks stunning.
"Avoiding sunscreens because of tryclosanes would be like avoiding refridgerators because you don't like dial-up internet - it's not around anymore, and was never in that thing in the first place" 😂
The same people who focus on cosmetics being unhealthy for our bodies turn a blind eye to oil spills being bad for our planet. Thank you for this therapy session Michelle!
Michelle is not only knowledgeable but also hilarious 😂 what a treat to watch!
Glad we have you, Michelle. Thank you.
Okay this has been the best skincare/scicomm/skeptic video I've seen in a long time. Thank you so much for this digest!
The sunscreen during pregnancy thing absolutely drives me mad - it's such an emotionally fraught time, and when you're told you MUST use sunscreen because your skin is more sensitive, but you're also receiving the message all over the place that sunscreen is dangerous and will harm your baby, the outcome is inevitably that a percentage of pregnant women will either get burnt, or stop going outside altogether. My sister refused to wear any spf during pregnancy and she has a scientific background, so it can strike anyone.
People consciously preying on first time mothers wanting to do the best thing for their baby deserve jail time. We really ought to fight misinformation as not only it causes harm, but incidences of restrictive eating disorders and OCD are increasing as well. Fearmongering makes people paranoid and unsure whom they can trust due to strategies used by people using fear to make money. It's despicable.
Don't stop going outside altogether, but if you avoid going outside between 10AM and 4PM you are not very likely to get burned (edit: and avoiding some fruits like citrus helps a lot too)
I made sunscreen exactly once…I got sunburned within half an hour. Lesson learned.
I lost an older friend to melanoma two years ago. She beat every expectation by living for sixteen years with stage IV melanoma. But it was brutal, and she suffered a lot.
Margaret had a message for everyone at her funeral, delivered by her daughter: Wear sunscreen. Always.
another lesson: live a stressfree live and don’t eat garbage seedoils. Will probably make less people have cancer than ‘wear sunscreen’.
I'm SICK of Andrew Huberman. He's constantly getting promoted by youtube and I'm not gonna listen to his opinions and recommendations on literally anything and everything just because he's an expert in one thing.
Honestly I don't think he is asking anyone to stop using sunscreen he just he doesn't cuz he found molecules in neurones. Ppl can think for themselves right?
Am still gonna use sunscreen lol😂
I'm a expert on Warhammer 40K
Now here's my hottest stock tips and what car seta you should buy for your child
As a biologist I'm ashamed of Hubrisman
I tried to rebuke you in all caps and then put emojis 1 through 10 afterwards, but I got auto-flagged as spam. You're lucky youtube hates and crimps my style.
Thank you for bringing clarity to the chaos of sunscreen Lab Muffin.
TH-cam knows things… I haven’t looked up anything relating to sunburns or sunscreen, yet I went out on a boat yesterday and burned the heck out of myself. Now, I’ve seen several videos talking about sunburns and sunscreen that I wouldn’t normally have on my feed..
The "SPF measures the time it takes to sunburn" reminds me of how every few years a post will go viral saying the same thing about toaster settings 😅
Tbf no one knows what the knobs on them do.
It's intriguing how individuals often portray themselves as authorities on subjects when, in truth, they're simply misinformed!
as an oily girl with acne, i feel really bad just watching at this diy sunscreen 😭
Michelle!! As a pharmacist and someone interested in skincare and skin health, I HUGELY appreciate your evidence-based, contextually-appropriate takedowns! Subscribed and I can’t wait to watch the rest of your work ❤
6:07 yaaaay!!! Arts and crafts with Michelle!!!! No, but seriously, thank you for the diagram. It's always so helpful in understanding these things 💛
Paul Saladino looks like he has skin of 60 year old
Damaged, dry and leather like.
I don't think it's just overexposure to the sun, but his appearance has changed drastically over the last few years. I believe he had health problems that triggered his switch from carnivore to "animal-based"...
Saladino eats tons of fruit. His diet is extremely high-carb. That contributes to inflammation. And excess, chronic inflammation would compromise skin healing.
Apparently he surfs all day every day
I’ve said it before but even if the “evidence”is somehow all type 2 errors, I’d still risk whatever they’re claiming over skin cancer
Whenever I hear "Increased rates of (medical condition) in the last x years" I always think "Yeah, increased rate of DIAGNOSIS in the last x years."
And no one ever talks about the falls in other diagnoses as we either got better at diagnosing things or treating them. Like the rise in autism diagnoses coincides with a fall in schizophrenia diagnoses because it used to be the case that basically everything got diagnosed as schizophrenia. Similarly rising cancer rates coincides with a fall in deaths from infectious diseases because when people stopped dying of turbecolosis they started living long enough to die from cancer instead.
@@hedgehog3180I hear the word "tuberculosis" and a little John Green pops up in the back of my head 😂
But yes, would be great to actually eliminate tuberculosis worldwide rather than just in rich countries. Let's make sure everybody is able to survive this curable disease so they can live long enough to die of something else! Preferably many decades later after having lived a full and happy life! 😊
Semantics
WRONG. Everyone is getting chronically ill, depressed, anxious, or obese nowadays. Are you blind or something? People like you are the cause of why no one is genuinely investigating ROOT CAUSES instead of researching bandaid symptom reducers.
WRONG. Age-corrected cancer has also increased. Wake up instead of blindly believing you need modern technology to stay healthy, you freak. The Maasai often live into their 100s without medicine.
At 15:20, it is truly remarkable how a scientist such as Michelle can maintain her composure when someone is misinterpreting correlation/causality in such a clear manner. Well done hahah 😉
"Nobody burns in twenty minutes."
I start burning in five minutes max on a cloudy day in New England without SPF... 😂