https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0306987708005999
There is no ignoring that cancer rates of all types, melanoma included, have risen since the launch of the covid injection. But there are other interesting facts about the increases in Melanoma.
It is rising in fair skinned people who work INDOORS, not people who are outside frequently.
It is not resulting from repeated sun exposure
What they have found is that windows in offices are designed to reduce UVB rays, but they do not counteract UVA rays. Also, Vitamin D is a protective mechanism against melanoma, but you have to be in SUNLIGHT to reap the benefit (or take supplements). What they found in this population of melanoma patients were they had low Vitamin D levels, they were not in the sunshine regularly to synthesize vitamin D (or expose themselves to sunlight), and they worked in offices with windows that did not block UVA rays.
The findings suggest that people who work indoors need to get outside more to increase melanin levels in their skin, promote Vitamin D synthesis, and in turn reduce melanoma risk, as well as the multitude of other Vitamin D deficiency problems such as poor immune response, low mood, seasonal affective mood disorder, decreased hormone levels, etc.
If you work in an office, open the window so that you aren’t sitting behind closed glass all day. That is where the danger can come from.
The myth that sunlight itself is dangerous is slowly unraveling itself.
Sunlight in moderation is one of the most healthy things you can have. That is why it has been villainized and so many people believe that any exposure is a death sentence. Are "they" really trying to make us healthy?
I had melanoma over 30 years ago. The cause was a deep sunburn when I was a kid. I worked in an office in the northeast for years before it manifested itself. I had a mole and a healthy margin around it removed from my back. The premise that normal, everyday sun exposure causes skin cancer is 100% bullshit. You have to get routine sun exposure daily to be healthy. Sun block products are horrible products; I lived in Hawaii for 12+ years and rarely used sun block. We just timed our exposure. See the Wolfram iPhone App SunExposure. There is a vitamin D app named dminder but I question their suggested exposure times - the SunExposure app calls out for shorter exposure times and I trust it 100%. Thanks Jennifer. Peace.