| Press Release
For Immediate Release: March 26, 2003
Contact: Wendy L. Chavez, EPA, ( 415) 947-4248
Katie Leighton, SHADE Foundation, (610) 513-6930
EPA Administrator Whitman Announces Partnership
with Shonda Schilling of the Shade Foundation & Arizona Department
of Health to Help Prevent Skin Cancer and Promote Sun Safety in Arizona
WASHINGTON, DC - EPA Administrator Whitman today joined
students at Cherokee Elementary School along with SHADE Foundation founder
Shonda Schilling and husband, Arizona Diamondback pitcher Curt Schilling,
to announce a new sun safety partnership with the Arizona Department of
Health Services. The partnership aims to educate children about skin cancer
and other health risks from overexposure to the sun.
As a state with high incident rates of melanoma, the
EPA and ADHS are teaming up with the SHADE Foundation to integrate melanoma
awareness into Arizona classroom curriculum using the EPA's SunWise program.
EPA Administrator Christie Whitman said, "Nothing
is better than a beautiful day under the broad expanse of a sunny Arizona
sky. But with the rising incidence of skin cancer in the United States,
we have to be sure we all know how to enjoy those days safely. Teaching
our kids how to protect themselves from excessive exposure to the sun's
rays is the goal of EPA's SunWise program. I am delighted to join with
the Shade Foundation and the Arizona Department of Health Services in
helping to ensure that all of Arizona's children enjoy a bright, healthy
future here in the Grand Canyon State."
SunWise is a national environmental and health education
program designed to teach children and their care givers how to protect
themselves from overexposure to the sun's ultraviolet (UV) rays. SunWise
is a partnership program with schools, which in turn sponsor classroom
and community activities that raise children's awareness of stratospheric
ozone depletion, UV radiation and simple sun care strategies.
"Melanoma can be prevented. If we can teach responsible
sun behavior to children, hopefully they will carry this attitude with
them throughout their life and reduce the number of melanoma incidents
in the future," said Shonda Schilling, melanoma survivor and founder
of the Shade Foundation. "The EPA's SunWise Program is a great way
to get our message through to students."
"Protecting young children from overexposure to
the sun can have a tremendous impact on lowering lifetime risk of skin
cancer," said Arizona Department of Health Services Environmental
Health Office Chief Will Humble.
"The EPA's SunWise program was designed with the
goal of keeping our children -- our future-- healthy by giving them, their
teachers and their parents the information they need about the dangerous
effects of UV radiation," said Wayne Nastri, regional administrator
of the EPA's Pacific Southwest office in San Francisco. "This partnership
is a huge victory for the fight against skin cancer."
Skin cancer is the most common form of cancer in the
United States and is increasing at an alarming rate. A person's chance
of developing melanoma is directly related to sun exposure before the
age of 18. One in 5 children in the U.S. will develop skin cancer during
his or her lifetime.
The SHADE Foundation was founded in 2002 by Shonda Schilling,
wife of Arizona Diamondback Pitcher Curt Schilling, to educate the public
about melanoma prevention and early detection. Shonda Schilling battled
melanoma throughout the Diamondbacks' World Series season in 2001. After
five operations removing 25 malignant melanomas from her body, today Shonda
is cancer free and has dedicated her life to sun-safety.
People can still enjoy time spent outdoors while protecting
themselves from overexposure to UV rays by following these steps: check
the UV index, wear a hat; wear tightly woven, loose-fitting, full length
clothing; use SPF 15+ sun screen; use UV-blocking sunglasses; and seek
shade.
For more information on the SunWise Program, visit http://www.shadefoundation.org
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