[Paddlewise] On the subject of sunglasses....

From: <SKILLIANS_at_aol.com>
Date: Sat, 14 Aug 1999 08:59:29 EDT
Info from one of my favorite websites: (www.straightdope.com)

Dear Cecil:

Having recently moved to Florida from Michigan, I've become increasingly 
concerned about the effects of ultraviolet rays on my eyes. You see, I 
have had the same sunglasses for ten years or so, which is no problem if 
the UV protection is inherent in the glass. But it might be time for new 
glasses if the UV protection was just a coating. Ten years of wiping 
might have removed it. Since the glasses are dark, my pupils must be 
enlarged and more vulnerable. Is the UV protection on or in my glasses? 
Is it different for new sunglasses? Has the quality of protection 
changed over the years? And lastly, when cheap plastic sunglasses say 
they offer UV protection, can they be trusted? Tell me, Cecil, how do I 
best protect my eyes in the Sunshine State? --Steve, via AOL

Cecil replies: 

Sorry, babe. You're in Florida now, home of Disney World, pink 
flamingos, and Miami Beach. You'll be lucky if you don't go blind.

As for your sunglasses, you should definitely get new ones. This has 
nothing to do with UV but rather with the fact that your glasses, 
perhaps the most fashion-driven item in the average person's wardrobe, 
are ten years old. Just a guess: do you work in the math department? No 
matter. Assuming you don't want to spend two grand for gold frames a la
 Stevie Wonder, you can get shades that effectively block UV for maybe 
ten to forty bucks. (We've heard widely varying opinions, by the way, on 
whether protective coatings wear off, whether coatings ten years ago 
were any good, etc. All the more reason to buy new.)

You're right to worry about UV. Due (probably) to the thinning ozone 
layer, UV-related health problems are skyrocketing. Look at Australia. 
The country has three strikes against it: it's in the southern 
hemisphere, where the ozone layer is thinner; it gets a lot of strong 
sun because it's close to the equator; and its high-risk Caucasian 
population is outdoors a lot. As a result Australia has the highest rate 
of skin cancer in the world. OK, we're talking about eye problems now, 
not skin cancer, but they're all related. Chances are we'll be seeing 
increasing rates of cataracts, retinal and corneal damage, and other eye 
problems in years to come.

Choosing the right sunglasses is critical. Some experts think 
poor-quality shades actually will make matters worse--they don't block 
UV but do cause your pupils to dilate, allowing more damaging rays to 
enter. It's possible the danger is exaggerated, though. As other 
researchers point out, daytime light levels are so high that your pupils 
constrict even with sunglasses.

Even good sunglasses don't mean your problems are over. Sunglasses can 
block UV from entering through the central part of your field of vision, 
but plenty of damaging rays can sneak in around the edges. Wraparound 
shades or glasses having side shields offer more but not total 
protection. One study found that, on average, sunglasses let in 3 
percent of UV light when they're snug against the bridge of the nose but 
29 percent when they're six millimeters distant. Pushing up your glasses 
might look geeky, but it sure beats cataract surgery.

Given the spotty protection offered by sunglasses, some experts say that 
if you're going outdoors for any length of time your first line of 
defense should be a wide-brimmed hat.  A baseball cap is OK too, 
provided you wear the bill in front. Better yet, wear both hat and 
shades. One study of 900 Chesapeake Bay shellfish harvesters found that 
those who wore sunglasses and brimmed hats got cataracts only a third as 
often as those who didn't.

Tests of sunglasses have found wide variations in their effectiveness 
against UV, regardless of cost, tint color, or lens material. Ignore the 
sales hype and look for the following voluntary industry labels. 
"Cosmetic" sunglasses block 70 percent of the sun's most damaging rays, 
"general purpose" shades block 95 percent, and "special purpose" glasses 
block 99 percent. "UV-400," another label you often see, supposedly 
means the sunglasses block 100 percent of UV. A lot of experts recommend 
glasses in the latter two categories, the special purpose in this case 
being that they may keep you from going blind. 

--CECIL ADAMS
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Received on Sat Aug 14 1999 - 06:01:29 PDT

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