sun screen
By Jesse Michener
It
turns out that many schools and camps do that worrying for parents,
with policies that ban kids from carrying sunscreen without a doctor's
note and warn staffers not to dispense it. Such policies are getting new
scrutiny this week, thanks to Jesse Michener, a mother in Tacoma,
Wash., who was horrified to see two of her daughters, ages 11 and 9,
return from a school field day with severe sunburns.
The
girls have extremely fair skin, and none of the adults at the event
offered them sunscreen — or shade, for that matter — as a rainy day
turned sunny, Michener, 37, wrote in a post in her blog,
Life.Photographed, that got nationwide attention. More than a week
later, their skin still is peeling and red, Michener told USA TODAY
Wednesday: "It's appalling."
Michener says
school officials have promised her the sunscreen policy will be changed
by fall, thanks to a change in state law that gives schools new leeway
on handling over-the-counter drugs. Shannon McMinimee, a lawyer for
Tacoma Public Schools, said in an e-mail that the school board was
expected to review the policy but would need to seek guidance from state
officials and health experts first.
But
sunscreen rules are common. They typically stem from state and local
policies that stop kids from bringing any drug — including
non-prescription drugs — to school, says Jeff Ashley, a California
dermatologist who leads an advocacy group called Sun Safety for Kids.
Sunscreens are regulated as over-the-counter drugs, so many districts treat them like aspirin, just to be safe, he says.
Ashley
helped get California to pass laws that say kids have a right to bring
sunscreen, hats and other sun gear to school. That was nearly a decade
ago, but as far as he knows, no other state has done the same.
So
there's a mish-mash of policies. Often, "sunscreen application at
school seems to be an issue that each individual school district rules
on," says Jennifer Allyn of the American Academy of Dermatology. "Some
treat sunscreen as they would any other fragrance-type product, and
forbid their use to avoid allergic reactions. Others require a doctor's
note, and others treat sunscreen like something as basic as Chapstick."
The academy endorses sunscreen use but has no policy on how schools
should handle it, she says.
But Ashley says
allergy concerns are overblown: "Sunscreen allergies are no more common
than allergies to soap. Are schools going to take soap out of their
bathrooms?"
Another common concern: Adults
will get in trouble for inappropriately touching kids if they help apply
sunscreen. That was the question in Maryland last summer when the
state enforced, then repealed, a rule forbidding camp staffers or even
other kids from slathering lotion on campers. Now it's OK, as long as
parents say it is.
Michener says her daughters
also were forbidden to bring hats to school. That's another common
policy, Ashley says. "Schools will tell you hats can be signs of gang
affiliation." Some schools dodge that danger, he says, by selling or
supplying identical sun-safety hats.
Parents
who find their school or camp lacks a sensible sun-safety policy can
form committees to change the policies, he says. Tips on how to do that
and what to include are at sunsafetyforkids.org.
Michener
has joined another group, Project Backback. It also advocates for sun
safety at schools and is affiliated with a sunscreen maker.
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