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The Toll of Trucking
The Dark Side of the Sun

Above you see a 69-year-old man who drove a delivery truck for 28 years. You can see the damaged skin on the left side of his face. Over the course of many years of exposure, the sun’s rays can cause extensive damage outside and in, resulting in thickening of the skin and extreme wrinkling on the outside, and potential cancers on the inside.

Part of our mission at Diversity is to help protect professional drivers, truckers, and delivery men, while also helping families protect their newborns and young children. The better we get at controlling light, the safer we will be. We have written on this topic before, and if you are interested in hearing from experts like the Skin Cancer Foundation we have lots of info to share.

Below you can read the original article on the man above from CBS news. It is worth a read, and has some sobering news.

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(CBS News) It’s no secret that lots of sun damages the skin. Too much ultraviolet radiation from the sun has been tied to premature aging, more wrinkles and a raised risk for potentially deadly skin cancer.

An image published in a recent issue of the New England Journal of Medicine paints a clear picture of what kind of damage the sun can cause a person’s skin.

This unidentified 69-year-old trucker (pictured above) who has been on the road for 28 years has accumulated lots of exposure to ultraviolet A (UVA) radiation.

The man’s condition is called unilateral dermatoheliosis and the man’s skin has been gradually thickening over the past 25 years.

UVA rays transmit through clouds and window glass to penetrate the skin’s layers, and have been tied to aging and wrinkles. According to the journal, chronic UVA exposure can result in thickening of the skin’s top layers, the epidermis and stratum corneum, as well as destruction of the skin’s elastic fibers. The truck driver took the brunt of the damage on the left side of his face because of his many hours behind the wheel.

Experts had thought only ultraviolet B radiation (UVB), which cause sunburn, were the main cause of skin cancer but recent research suggests UVA rays can damage DNA in the skin’s deepest layers, increasing risk they become cancerous.

Doctors eventually recommended to this man sun protection, vitamin A creams called topical retinoids and frequent screenings for skin cancer.

To protect yourself against UV radiation, the CDC says to seek shade, especially during midday hours, wear protective clothing, wear a hat with a wide brim to shade the face and head and use sun screen that protects against both UVA and UVB rays.

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