Solar Gard Window Film Provides Skin Protection While Driving
The average UK driver spends 4 hours per day, the equivalent of 9 whole days in their car commuting to work each year.1 Most people don't realize that the glass in their automobile protects them from UVB rays only, those that cause sunburn. Only 10% of side windows provide UVA protection2, the rays that cause aging and skin cancer. Cumulative exposure to UVA is directly linked to skin cancer, premature aging, and even cataracts.
Solar Gard window film protects from both UVA and UVB ultraviolet rays.
There is a direct link between more time spent driving an automobile and a higher incidence of right-sided skin cancers.3 Although all types of skin cancer increase with exposure to unprotected skin, particularly common among drivers is a form of melanoma that is caused by cumulative UVA exposure rather than the more common form of melanoma that occurs from intense, intermittent sun exposure.
While every country in Europe has different tint laws in place, there are a wide range of colors, from nearly invisible to darker window films that all provide broad spectrum protection.
1 Touchdown-VansonBourne telephone survey United Kingdom, 2011
2Automotive News Data Center, Association of International Automobile Manufacturers of Canada, Mexican Automotive Manufacturers Association and company sources
3 Assessment of cumulative exposure to UVA through the study of asymmetrical facial skin aging, Clinical Interventions in Aging, Saint-Jacques Hospital, University of Franche-Comté, Sept. 2010