Can Selfies cause skin damage? Yes. Taking a selfie can be as damaging to the skin as smoking, drinking, and too much sunshine.
Respected clinician Sara Cheeney warns the electromagnetic rays from smart phones and tablets will speed up the ageing process, including wrinkles and brown spots.
Nurse Practitioner Sara, owner of Pure Perfection Clinic in Rossett, has seen a rise in patients who admit selfies cause skin damage in their own accelerated skin cell damage.
She can even identify the hand a person uses to hold their phone by examining which side of the face is worst affected.
“The results are quite alarming,” said Sara, a former nurse who opened her first clinic in the village, on the border of Wrexham and Chester, 10 years ago.
“I get a lot of bloggers and patients who take selfies every day coming to me and complaining about the issue, and it’s an issue which seems to be getting worse.
“The blue rays from smartphone screens can do more damage than too much sunshine, so I would urge youngsters in particular to be extra careful.”
With millions of teenagers glued to Instagram, Tik Tok, Snapchat and other social media platforms the risk of pre-mature skin ageing will be common in the years ahead, said Sara.
She added: “Using moisturisers and shop-bought oils and creams won’t reverse the harm that’s already been done.
“Neither will regular UV sunscreen as the radiation emitted from the phone is on a different wavelength.
“The only solutions are to rehydrate skin from within and use advanced technology and sunscreen with ingredients that protect against High Energy Visible (HEV) light and Infa Red (IR) light, such as ZO Skin Health products.”
World-renowned dermatologist Dr Zein Obagi – founder of ZO and the Obagi Skin Health Institute in Beverley Hills – agreed selfies cause skin damage and would have a long-standing and negative impact on the faces of future generations.
A mentor of Sara, he recruited the 37 year-old to become a national trainer and brand ambassador for the range, even inviting her out to the US for exclusive coaching at the Los Angeles facility.
“Your cell phone will damage your skin,” said Dr Obagi.
“It’s not documented but in my clinical observation I can tell whether someone uses their right hand or left hand to hold their phone.
“You start to see dull dirty looking texture that you cannot identify on one side of the face.”
He added: “A sunscreen will not protect you, but if you saturate your skin with anti-oxidants it can help prevent DNA damage from electronic devices.”
Other health experts say the electromagnetic radiation from mobile phones is preventing skin from repairing itself, breaking the DNA strand and causing oxidative stress on cells.
Sara, who grew her business while fighting breast cancer and raising two young children, added: “The facts are there to be seen, and I’ve already encouraged my patients to stimulate and hydrate their skin.
“Women in particular have problems with sensitive skin and tend to be the ones who use more products.
“That’s why we I would urge them to come in and see us, even for advice, to prevent their skin cells being damaged any further.”
Sara, from Llangollen, is also supporting a campaign to highlight the number of untrained and inexperienced therapists and aestheticians entering the sector without suitable accreditation.
Her vision for Pure Perfection includes a training academy and expansion of their popular HydraFacial facilities, and putting an end to the widespread rise of “non-medical unscrupulous practitioners”.
“The UK is the only country that is so unregulated and allows all sorts of people run businesses like this and do treatments,” she added.
“We get a lot of patients arriving here after going somewhere else and having a bad experience, which has to stop.
“We always look at the science and clinical trials behind a product or treatment to ensure that they are safe and give proven results. We’re a medical clinic with the patient’s health and wellbeing at the forefront of our everything we do, which is why we continue to grow.”
And cancer battle didn’t stop her making it a success. Sara Cheeney of Pure Perfection Clinic wants to change the face of the aesthetics sector. A mother inspired to go into the cosmetics industry because of her own problems with psoriasis has now successfully grown her company while fighting breast cancer. Clinician Sara Cheeney plans …
In every supermarket, pharmacy, beauty magazine, there are shelves and pages dedicated to moisturising products. They are consistently labelled with miraculous anti-ageing, super-hydrating properties and year on year we collectively empty billions of pounds from our pockets into the industry. At Pure Perfection Clinic in Wrexham, Chester, we know that moisturisers do more harm than good. …
Definition, even features, volume; these are the things that so many dream of but have not been born with. They are also the things that some people once owned, but have lost at the cruel hands of time and the visible ageing process. In either case, when our complexion kicks down at our confidence, we …
Selfies Cause Skin Damage: POV Pics Could Be As Damaging For Skin as Smoking and Sun
Can Selfies cause skin damage? Yes. Taking a selfie can be as damaging to the skin as smoking, drinking, and too much sunshine.
Respected clinician Sara Cheeney warns the electromagnetic rays from smart phones and tablets will speed up the ageing process, including wrinkles and brown spots.
Nurse Practitioner Sara, owner of Pure Perfection Clinic in Rossett, has seen a rise in patients who admit selfies cause skin damage in their own accelerated skin cell damage.
She can even identify the hand a person uses to hold their phone by examining which side of the face is worst affected.
“The results are quite alarming,” said Sara, a former nurse who opened her first clinic in the village, on the border of Wrexham and Chester, 10 years ago.
“I get a lot of bloggers and patients who take selfies every day coming to me and complaining about the issue, and it’s an issue which seems to be getting worse.
“The blue rays from smartphone screens can do more damage than too much sunshine, so I would urge youngsters in particular to be extra careful.”
With millions of teenagers glued to Instagram, Tik Tok, Snapchat and other social media platforms the risk of pre-mature skin ageing will be common in the years ahead, said Sara.
She added: “Using moisturisers and shop-bought oils and creams won’t reverse the harm that’s already been done.
“Neither will regular UV sunscreen as the radiation emitted from the phone is on a different wavelength.
“The only solutions are to rehydrate skin from within and use advanced technology and sunscreen with ingredients that protect against High Energy Visible (HEV) light and Infa Red (IR) light, such as ZO Skin Health products.”
World-renowned dermatologist Dr Zein Obagi – founder of ZO and the Obagi Skin Health Institute in Beverley Hills – agreed selfies cause skin damage and would have a long-standing and negative impact on the faces of future generations.
A mentor of Sara, he recruited the 37 year-old to become a national trainer and brand ambassador for the range, even inviting her out to the US for exclusive coaching at the Los Angeles facility.
“Your cell phone will damage your skin,” said Dr Obagi.
“It’s not documented but in my clinical observation I can tell whether someone uses their right hand or left hand to hold their phone.
“You start to see dull dirty looking texture that you cannot identify on one side of the face.”
He added: “A sunscreen will not protect you, but if you saturate your skin with anti-oxidants it can help prevent DNA damage from electronic devices.”
Other health experts say the electromagnetic radiation from mobile phones is preventing skin from repairing itself, breaking the DNA strand and causing oxidative stress on cells.
Sara, who grew her business while fighting breast cancer and raising two young children, added: “The facts are there to be seen, and I’ve already encouraged my patients to stimulate and hydrate their skin.
“Women in particular have problems with sensitive skin and tend to be the ones who use more products.
“That’s why we I would urge them to come in and see us, even for advice, to prevent their skin cells being damaged any further.”
Sara, from Llangollen, is also supporting a campaign to highlight the number of untrained and inexperienced therapists and aestheticians entering the sector without suitable accreditation.
Her vision for Pure Perfection includes a training academy and expansion of their popular HydraFacial facilities, and putting an end to the widespread rise of “non-medical unscrupulous practitioners”.
“The UK is the only country that is so unregulated and allows all sorts of people run businesses like this and do treatments,” she added.
“We get a lot of patients arriving here after going somewhere else and having a bad experience, which has to stop.
“We always look at the science and clinical trials behind a product or treatment to ensure that they are safe and give proven results. We’re a medical clinic with the patient’s health and wellbeing at the forefront of our everything we do, which is why we continue to grow.”
Click here to book an appointment with one of our members of staff, or call us on 01244 917259 and quote our ‘Selfies Cause Skin Damage article’ for more information.
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