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ESPD European Society for Photodermatology
Heliora Laboratories Cutisol Pharma Actinova Dermocosmetics Solenta Skin Science Luviderm Labs Photalia Pharma
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Survey February 2026 · Volume —, Sample issue

Self-Reported Sun-Protection Behaviour Across Selected European Populations

Sample contribution — author list to be confirmed

Sample article — illustrative content for this prototype, not a peer-reviewed publication. Figures present representative rather than empirical data.

Abstract

Sun-protection behaviour varies substantially across European populations, reflecting differences in climate, cultural attitudes and public-health messaging. This illustrative survey summary presents a representative cross-country comparison of self-reported use of SPF 30+ sunscreen. Sample article and figure — provided for this prototype.

Effective photoprotection is one of the most actionable levers for reducing the long-term burden of skin cancer and photoageing, yet adherence to recommended practices remains uneven across European populations.

Findings

Self-reported regular use of SPF 30+ sunscreen during peak-UV months varies materially across the surveyed populations, with southern countries generally reporting higher use than northern ones.

The patterns are consistent with a combination of ambient UV exposure, cultural attitudes to sun and tan, and the historical strength of national public-health campaigns.

100 80 60 40 20 0 62% 71% 58% 49% 41% 55% Italy Spain France Germany UK Sweden SPF 30+ use (%)
Figure. Self-reported regular use of SPF 30+ sunscreen across selected European populations. Illustrative — sample data for this prototype.

Discussion

Cross-country variation highlights both progress and persistent gaps. Even in higher-adherence populations, a substantial minority report no regular sunscreen use during peak-UV months.

Targeted public-health messaging — emphasising sunscreen as one component within a broader photoprotective approach (shade, clothing, timing) — remains a clear priority across the region.

Conclusion

Photoprotective behaviour is shaped by climate, culture and policy as much as by individual choice. Continued cross-country evaluation, paired with adaptive messaging, supports the society's broader mission of reducing the avoidable cutaneous consequences of solar UV.