Bright Guard Hits a Home Run with Mike Schmidt

Bright Guard Hits a Home Run with Mike Schmidt

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Bright Guard Hits a Home Run with Mike Schmidt

Bright Guard Partners with Richard David Kann Melanoma Foundation

BrightGuard is dedicated to promoting active outdoor lifestyles and protecting people while they are enjoying the sun. Through a partnership with a progressive nonprofit, the Richard David Kann Melanoma Foundation, we continue to move forward with our goal of giving people of all ages access to sunscreen in outdoor spaces around the country.

Hall of Famer Mike Schmidt joined the fight alongside the Richard David Kann Melanoma Foundation to promote sun safety throughout the Parks and Recreation departments in West Palm Beach Florida. With a message to strikeout cancer, Mike Schmidt expressed an important message that with the proper protection skin cancer can be prevented all together, giving us more time to have fun in the sun.

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BrightGuard Installed Throughout Gainesville

BrightGuard Installed Throughout Gainesville

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BrightGuard Installed Throughout Gainesville

BrightGuard & Impact Melanoma Team-Up in Gainesville

As a part of Melanoma Awareness Month, the City of Gainesville Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs Department (PRCA), in partnership with IMPACT Melanoma (IMPACT) (formerly Melanoma Foundation of New England), is installing Bright Guard sunscreen dispensers (for public use) at 50 locations this summer, including parks, pools, athletic fields, trails and more.

“We are pleased to offer this service throughout our parks and facilities. Our staff are often asked by parents if we have sunscreen available. Having access to skin protection we hope will result in having a long term impact on reducing skin cancer,” says Steve Phillips, director of PRCA.

An unveiling ceremony will take place at 3 p.m. Wednesday, May 17 at the Bo Diddley Plaza (111 E. University Ave.). There will be demonstrations of the dispensers and sun safety information will be distributed. Representatives from the Florida Department of Health in Alachua County and IMPACT will help educate the public about the dangers of sun exposure and skin cancer.

Thanks to the support of our sponsors, Florida Skin Cancer & Dermatologists Specialists PA and an anonymous skin protection advocate, Gainesville residents and visitors will have access to free sunscreen at 50 designated locations within Gainesville. With partners and sponsors, the City of Gainesville has offset 70 percent of the cost, with the remaining 30 percent being covered by Wild Spaces & Public Places funds residents voted for last November.

“We are thrilled to expand on our highly successful program across the country and continue to offer sunscreen units for public and private distribution throughout the country,” says Laurie Seavey, practice safe skin manager for IMPACT. “We hope sunscreen dispensers will become as commonplace as hand sanitizers over the next few years.”

The specially-designed dispensers, which are being installed across the country, are part of Practice Safe Skin, a program that offers sunscreen as an effective, preventive measure to help avoid sun over-exposure year round. Each sunscreen dispenser is equipped with four 1000 mL bags of SPF-30 sport sunscreen, safe for people age six months old and up. Ingredients are printed on the machines upon installation.

A recent study from the University of Colorado cited this program as an influencing force behind the decrease in melanoma rates in the northeast. Melanoma is rising faster than any other cancer, with one person every 50 minutes dying from the disease. Studies show that with daily sunscreen protection, the risk of melanoma is preventable. Details of the study may be viewed at http://mfne.org/mfne-cited-study-conducted-university-colorado/.

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The Portland Sea Dogs Pitch a Perfect Game with BrightGuard

The Portland Sea Dogs Pitch a Perfect Game with BrightGuard

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The Portland Sea Dogs Pitch a Perfect Game with BrightGuard

Haddock Field is Now a Sun Safe Stadium

Mainers will be the first to tell you: winters are long and summers pass in the blink of an eye.“When summer comes around, people don’t think about using sunscreen. We only have such a short amount of sunshine!” said Emily Clyatt, Community Health Promotions Specialist at the City of Portland Public Health Division.

In August 2016, Maine Cancer Foundationapproached Emily and her colleagues to develop a sun safety awareness campaign. The timing was ideal for implementation in mid-2017, just in time for those fleeting months of summer. “MCF reached out about the idea to talk with the Portland Sea Dogs,” said Clyatt. The minor-league baseball team is a family-friendly attraction, with 60 home games at Hadlock Field spanning the warmest months of the year.

MCF awarded the City of Portland Public Health Division $20,000 to execute a sun safety campaign with public service announcements and other targeted prevention messages, along with five free sunscreen dispensers scattered throughout the ball park. The campaign will run the length of the 2017 Sea Dogs season.

“At least once per home game, a PSA will run on the big screen. I met with Hadlock Field’s graphic designer, and expressed our hopes for three consistent messages: sunscreen, covering up, and reapplying,” said Clyatt. The collaboration bore the catch phrase Play More, Burn Less along with an eye-catching 15 second video with simple graphics. The game time announcer will read over the video with the following text:

“Hey fans. Are you being sun smart? The Sea Dogs and our partners want to remind you to protect your skin this summer by wearing a hat, sunglasses, and other clothes; using sunscreen S-P-F fifteen or higher; and reapplying your sunscreen every two hours or after swimming or physical activity. Look for the yellow sunscreen dispensers throughout the stadium to stay sun smart this season so you can play more, and burn less.”

Folks of all ages will flock to Hadlock Field this summer. The stadium holds 7,000 seats at capacity, which means the messaging along with the sunscreen will reach many thousands of Mainers. “To have the dispensers in people’s environment, free for them to use at leisure, is ideal,”said Clyatt.

Cheers to enjoying the next few months of sunshine safely! Sunscreen may help stop skin cancer before it starts.

#togetherwecan #challengecancer2020 #playmoreburnless

Donate today to fund innovative cancer prevention projects across Maine!

Want more about the grant? Slugger – the official mascot of the Portland Sea Dogs – will be promoting sun safety too! Keep your eyes on his official Facebook page. And click here to read more about the grant award.

The City of Portland Public Health Division was also awarded $5,000 to install sunscreen dispensers at Casco Bay Lines. Learn more!

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BrightGuard Shows Up In Nevada

BrightGuard Shows Up In Nevada

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BrightGuard Shows Up In Nevada

Nevada Cancer Coalition Creating Sun Smart Schools with BrightGuard

“Precautions like wearing sunscreen, covering up with long sleeves, a hat, or sunglasses, and avoiding peak hours of sunlight, can go a long way to help prevent skin cancer”

Skin Cancer Detection and Prevention Month kicks off May 1 with Melanoma Monday, and continues throughout the month to encourage sun safety and skin cancer prevention.

Nevada Cancer Coalition, a statewide nonprofit based in Reno, considers the month a key opportunity to spread the message of being “Sun Smart.”

“It’s estimated that one in five individuals will be diagnosed with skin cancer in their lifetime, some people in their teens and 20s,” said Kristen Power, communications director at Nevada Cancer Coalition.

“Precautions like wearing sunscreen, covering up with long sleeves, a hat, or sunglasses, and avoiding peak hours of sunlight, can go a long way to help prevent skin cancer. We don’t need to avoid the sun; we just need to be sun smart when outdoors.”

According to the U.S. Surgeon General, the number of Americans who have had skin cancer at some point in the last three decades is estimated to be higher than the number for all other cancers combined. And melanoma has become one of the most common cancers among the nation’s adolescents and young adults.

Nevada Cancer Coalition took these statistics to heart, creating a sun safety program for youth to help prevent skin cancer for future generations.

Sun Smart Nevada, and the youth program Sun Smart Schools, launched in 2015 and is now practiced in nearly two dozen schools in four districts statewide. Sun Smart Schools helps to establish campus sun safety policies, provides free sun safety curriculum for grades pre-K through 12, and offers automatic sunscreen dispensers to schools for recess and other outdoor activities. School sun safety assemblies and guest speakers are also provided, with some in the northern Nevada area featuring Archie from the Reno Aces.

Over-exposure to the sun’s UV radiation and use of indoor tanning devices are the primary causes of skin cancer, including basal cell and squamous cell carcinomas and melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer. Nevada’s nearly 300 days of sunshine annually and often high altitudes create conditions that necessitate extra caution when enjoying the outdoors.

A good rule of thumb for skin cancer prevention is “Slip, Slop, Slap, Seek, Slide.” These “5 S’s” are a cornerstone of the Sun Smart Nevada and Sun Smart Schools programs, and encourage people to:

  • Slip on a shirt or sun protective clothing
  • Slop on sunscreen with a substantial SPF rating (30) and both UVA and UVB protection, and re-apply every two hours
  • Slap on a hat, the wider the brim the better
  • Seek shade or shelter during peak sun exposure times, generally from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
  • Slide on sunglasses to protect the eye

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BrightGuard Rolls out in Tampa Florida

BrightGuard Rolls out in Tampa Florida

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BrightGuard Rolls out in Tampa Florida

33 Free BrightGuard Sunscreen Dispensers are Now Across Tampa Bay

TAMPA, Fla. – The city of Tampa now has free sunscreen dispensers across 33 public pools and splash pads for anyone to use. Last May, city council members expressed interest in the idea after a non-profit organization brought forth the idea.

The bright yellow battery automated dispenser have SPF 30 sunscreen and can be found at:

  1. POOLS
  • Bobby Hicks Pool: 4201 W Mango Ave, 33616
  • Copeland Pool: 11001 N 15th St., 33612
  • Cuscaden Pool: 2900 N 15th St., 33605
  • Cyrus Greene Pool: 2101 E Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd, 33603
  • Danny Del Rio Pool: 10105 N Boulevard, 33603
  • Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Pool: 2200 N Oregon Ave. 33607
  • Interbay Pool: 4321 Estrella Ave. 33629
  • Loretta Ingraham Pool: 1611 N. Hubert Ave. 33607
  • Roy Jenkins Pool: 154 Columbia Dr. 33606
  • Spicola Family Pool: 2615 E Corrina St. 33605
  • Sulphur Springs Pool: 701 E Bird St. 33604
  • Williams Park Pool: 4362 E. Osborne Ave. 33610
  1. SPLASH PAD
  • Anderson Park: 821 S Rome Ave 33606
  • Ballast Point Park: 5300 Interbay Blvd. 33611
  • Cotanchobee Fort Brooke Park: 601 Old Water St. 33602
  • Curtis Hixon Waterfront Park Mist: 600 N Ashley Dr. 33602
  • Curtis Hixon Waterfront Park Louver: 600 N Ashley Dr. 33602
  • Giddens Park: 5202 N 12th St. 33603
  • Perry Harvey Sr. Park: 1201 N Orange St. 33602
  • Springhill Park: 1000 E Eskimo Ave 33604
  • Water Works Park: 1710 N Highland Ave. 33602

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Copyright © 2023 BrightGuard Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use