BrightGuard Protecting Firefighters

BrightGuard Protecting Firefighters

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BrightGuard Protecting Firefighters

New sunscreen Dispenser to Help Protect Montague Firefighters From Sun’s Rays

“During brush fires, training outside, it’s very easy to get burned”

MONTAGUE, MA (WGGB/WSHM) – Applying sunscreen before a day at the pool or the beach is many times a forethought, but what about for those who work extended hours outdoors?

When you walk into the Montague public safety complex, this is one of the first things you see: one of two new sunscreen dispensers for the Turners Falls Fire Department.

“We may be several hours in the sun. We just want to protect them,” said Montague Deputy Fire Chief John Zellman.

That skin protect is why Zellman applied for a grant through the Melanoma Foundation of New England for these new on-the-go products to protect the ones who protect us.

“[We] asked for five. We got two and we’re going to maintain them and continue on with the cancer prevention,” Zellman explained.

While firefighters wear protective clothing and helmets, the skin exposed to the sun is susceptible to burns too.

“During brush fires, training outside, it’s very easy to get burned. A day like today, guys are going out on a call right now, very easy to get burned,” Zellman added.

The Melanoma Foundation of New England is offering all businesses nationwide the opportunity to purchase these devices. It’s part of the response to the major public concern addressed in the Surgeon General’s 2014 call to action.

“They gave us the initial allotment for the two machines and then we’ll just maintain it. We think it’s a great program,” Zellman said.

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BrightGuard Arrives in Cape Cod

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BrightGuard Arrives in Cape Cod

Health: Chatham And Harwich To Receive New Sunscreen Dispensers

“These dispensers act as a reminder to use sunscreen. One day, we hope they will be as commonplace as hand sanitizer”

First, the bad news. Melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer, is being diagnosed at a rate faster than any other cancer, and one person dies from the disease every 50 minutes. Of all the counties in Massachusetts, Barnstable County has the second highest number of melanoma diagnoses.

The good news is that, with daily sunscreen protection, melanoma is largely preventable. And thanks to a grant through the Melanoma Foundation of New England, free sunscreen dispensers will soon be installed at some of the area’s most popular beaches.

“Skin cancers are definitely on the rise, and out here on the Cape, people come out, it’s a vacation, and they don’t realize the intensity of the sun they’re exposed to,” Barnstable County Public Health Nurse Deirdre Arvidson said. Arvidson applied for a grant from the Melanoma Foundation and won 16 of the dispensers for Cape towns.

Two dispensers are going to Harwich, and Health Director Paula Champagne said they will be put up shortly at Red River Beach. Each dispenser holds around 2,700 pumps of sunscreen.

“It’s kind of a cool thing,” she said. While the dispenser comes filled with sunscreen lotion, the town will continue to seek grant funding to keep it filled, Champagne said.

In Chatham, town officials are still deciding where best to place the two dispensers. One will be placed at the first lot at Harding’s Beach, Parks and Recreation Director Dan Tobin said, and the second will either be installed at the second lot at Harding’s or at Ridgevale Beach.

“It’s good for folks who run out of sunscreen or forget it at home,” Tobin said. “Certainly sun safety is something we want to be proactive about.”

Additional dispensers will be installed at beaches in Orleans and Brewster.

It’s not enough to merely put on sunscreen before a day at the beach, Arvidson said.

“People often forget that sunscreen has to be reapplied every two hours in order to stay effective, because the rays degrade the sunscreen,” she said. On the beach, those rays aren’t just coming from above, but also in reflected form from the surface of the water and even from the sand.

Funds for the dispensers come through the Melanoma Foundation, which received a $25,000 gift from the Arbella Insurance Foundation for this purpose through its “Practice Safe Skin” program.

“We love the idea of placing sunscreen dispensers in public areas,” Arbella President Beverly Tangvik wrote in a news release. “We’re proud to help support the fight against skin cancer.”

Aside from the obvious benefit of providing people with sunscreen, the dispensers serve another important purpose, Melanoma Foundation Executive Director Deb Girard wrote.

“These dispensers act as a reminder to use sunscreen. One day, we hope they will be as commonplace as hand sanitizer,” she wrote.

The sunscreen in the dispensers is an all-natural blend of zinc and titanium, providing protection at SPF-30. The product is designed to be safe for use on adults and youngsters as young as six months of age.

Businesses and non-profit organizations can purchase dispensers by visiting www.MFNE.org/Practice-Safe-Skin.

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