Over a dozen Australian sun creams pulled over safety concerns

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Australia classifies suncreams under therapeutic goods, and are therefore regulated to ensure their safety and efficacy.

Australia classifies sun creams under therapeutic goods, and they are therefore regulated to ensure their safety and efficacy.

PHOTO: AFP

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Over a dozen sun creams have been pulled from shelves in Australia after consumer advocacy group analysis found many of them did not provide the sun protection factor their makers claimed.

Long, hot days in the sun are a fixture of daily life in Australia, famous for its good weather and outdoors-loving lifestyle. But it also has the highest rate of skin cancer in the world – almost 19,000 Australians were estimated to be diagnosed with melanoma in 2024, official data shows.

An investigation in June by consumer group Choice found that of 20 popular brands of sun cream tested, only four accurately matched their Sun Protection Factor (SPF) claims.

And a follow-up investigation by Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) this week identified 21 sun creams that may fall short of their protection claims.

In some cases, products that claimed to have sun protection factors of 50+ “were unlikely to have an SPF greater than 21”, the group said.

Of the flagged sun creams, eight have been voluntarily recalled, 10 have had their sales suspended, two are being reviewed and one is not sold nationally. “You may wish to consider using an alternative product until the TGA completes its review,” the group said.

Australia classifies sun creams under therapeutic goods – health-related products for human use rather than cosmetics – and they are therefore regulated to ensure their safety and efficacy.

Firms can face heavy penalties for inaccurate labelling.

Professor Anne Cust, acting director of cancer research institute Daffodil Centre, said people should apply sun cream “as a last resort” and use it alongside other protective measures like seeking shade and wearing long sleeves.

The issue is particularly pressing given the looming summer season, Australian Medical Association vice-president Julian Rait told national broadcaster ABC.

“People should still have confidence in the vast majority of sun cream products, and they should still provide adequate protection from the sun, especially if used frequently,” he said. AFP

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