Sunscreen 101: SPF Explained, and How You Should Apply It

The AMA says more Americans than ever are taking precautions against sun damage.

— -- Every morning, Sabrina Walsh of Tiburon, California, feeds her three children breakfast, brushes their teeth and puts sunscreen on them.

The American Medical Association says more Americans than ever are taking precautions against sun damage, but it’s not enough.

Sunscreen can be confusing. A recent report JAMA Dermatology -- a monthly publication from the American Medical Association – says that only 51 percent of Americans understand what “SPF” means. The term generally appears on sunscreen tubes and bottles.

“SPF” stands for sun protection factor. An SPF of 15 blocks about 95 percent of UV rays. An SPF of 30 will block about 97 percent and an SPF of 50 will block 98 percent, Day said.

Applying it can also be confusing.

“I start with their cheeks and their nose and I kind of move upward with their forehead, and I really like to get their ears, then at that point, we usually move to the spray and we start coating their bodies and moving it up their necks,” Walsh said.

People often forget the ears and the areas where the cheeks meet the neck, Day said.

People are also urged to remember to apply sunscreen to their hands.

“Make sure you apply your sunscreen before leaving the house, then apply it to your kids,” Day said. “My experience is when you apply it on your children first, life calls and you get busy.”

Melanoma, a far more dangerous kind of skin cancer, is expected to account for more than 73,000 cases of skin cancer in 2015, also according to the ACS.