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HOW TO SUN-BATHE

tanking without tears SHORT PERIOD AT FIRST DOCTOR’S ADVICE Advice that will soon he valuable, now that the summer has begun, was given by a doctor who lectured to the Wellington Health Club on sunshine, and in a leaflet on sun-bathing that was distributed at the meeting. Proper use of the sun by normal people could increase their resistance to disease so that they no longer caught minor ailments like colds, influenza and sore throats, said the lecturer. Most people who worked in towns received insufficient sunshine' on their working days, and On holidays some look too much and did more harm than good. The absence of a brown pigment on the skin allowed the sun to burn it. and harmful substances from the burnt skin would toe absorbed by the blood. An excessively sunburnt person fell ill and wretched, his tongue was furred and dry, and he would have a severe headache and no appetite. The lecturer had seen children most dangerously ill through severe sunburn. Those unaccustomed to the sun should start gradually and take a little more each day, aiming to become tanned gradually without ever being uncomfortably sunburnt. They needed a hat and tinted spectacles for protection also. The fair skinned had to be specially careful. All fairskinned people burnt easily and many did not form an even .brown tan. The protective brown pigment in their skins was not smoothly and evenly distributed, but was formed into email collections which appeared as freckles, and those people sunburnt easily and badly. Everybody starting Off at flio beginning of the summer should begin with just, a few minutes back and front, and gradually increase the time. Begin With Small “Dose” The leaflet stated that early morning was the best time for sun, air ana sea bathing. It should not be taken through glass. Benefit came partly through cool air acting on the skin. One should begin with a small “dose,” noting the reaction six or 12 hours later when sunburn would become apparent, and gradually increasing the time and exposing larger areas. When browning was obtained, usually after a few exposures, the time might be safely lengthened. A feeling of well-being should accompany and follow a sun-bath. Fatiiigue. lassitude, irritability, fever, nausea or headache were symptoms of an overdose. The following was suggested as a sale procedure: —First day: Five minutes’ exposure Of arms and legs to fullest extent, giving half the time to the front and half to the back. Second day: Five minutes for arms and legs as before and five minutes for whole body, front and back. Third day: Fifteen minutes for the whole body, divided equally between front and back. Subsequent d.ay.S: An increase daily of live minutes up to a maximum 'Of one hour. Individual reaction was important. The very old, very young, very debilitated and the very fair, specially red-haired, burnt more easily. There could be no rule of thumb. Effect of Oiling Oiling Ithe skin before sunbathing greatly limited the action of the healing rays, and it was better to have shorter exposure without oiling. The best time for sea-baithing was two or three hours after breakfast. The sunbath should precede the bathe rather than follow it. Very small children should be allowed to run about in the sun for a few minutes only on the first day. wearing short knickers or trunks, and the (time should be increased by n few minutes each day, a watch for sunburn being kept. The beneficial action of cool air on the skin occurred in the shade as well as in the sun.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PBH19381230.2.143

Bibliographic details

Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 19825, 30 December 1938, Page 12

Word Count
602

HOW TO SUN-BATHE Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 19825, 30 December 1938, Page 12

HOW TO SUN-BATHE Poverty Bay Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 19825, 30 December 1938, Page 12

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