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Skin Whitening - Not Just A Philippine Thing....

Discussion in '☋ General Chat ☋' started by Knowdafish, Apr 11, 2011.

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  1. Knowdafish

    Knowdafish DI Forum Luminary

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    Skin bleaching a growing problem in Jamaica slums

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    Mikeisha Simpson AP – In this photo taken Jan. 14, 2011, Mikeisha Simpson poses for a portrait in Kingston, Jamaica. Simpson, …

    By DAVID McFADDEN, Associated Press David Mcfadden, Associated Press – Mon Apr 11, 5:58 am ET

    KINGSTON, Jamaica – Mikeisha Simpson covers her body in greasy white cream and bundles up in a track suit to avoid the fierce sun of her native Jamaica, but she's not worried about skin cancer.

    The 23-year-old resident of a Kingston ghetto hopes to transform her dark complexion to a cafe-au-lait-color common among Jamaica's elite and favored by many men in her neighborhood. She believes a fairer skin could be her ticket to a better life. So she spends her meager savings on cheap black-market concoctions that promise to lighten her pigment.

    Simpson and her friends ultimately shrug off public health campaigns and reggae hits blasting the reckless practice.

    "I hear the people that say bleaching is bad, but I'll still do it. I won't stop 'cause I like it and I know how to do it safe," said Simpson, her young daughter bouncing on her hip.

    People around the world often try to alter their skin color, using tanning salons or dyes to darken it or other chemicals to lighten it. In the gritty slums of Jamaica, doctors say the skin lightening phenomenon has reached dangerous proportions.

    "I know of one woman who started to bleach her baby. She got very annoyed with me when I told her to stop immediately, and she left my office. I often wonder what became of that baby," said Neil Persadsingh, a leading Jamaican dermatologist.

    Most Jamaican bleachers use over-the-counter creams, many of them knockoffs imported from West Africa. Long-term use of one of the ingredients, hydroquinone, has long been linked to a disfiguring condition called ochronosis that causes a splotchy darkening of the skin. Doctors say abuse of bleaching lotions has also left a web of stretch marks across some Jamaicans' faces.

    In Japan, the European Union, and Australia, hydroquinone has been removed from over-the-counter skin products and substituted with other chemicals due to concerns about health risks. In the U.S., over-the-counter creams containing up to 2 percent hydroquinone are recognized as safe and effective by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. A proposed ban by the FDA in 2006 fizzled.

    Lightening creams are not effectively regulated in Jamaica, where even roadside vendors sell tubes and plastic bags of powders and ointments from cardboard boxes stacked along sidewalks in market districts.

    "Many of the tubes are unlabeled as to their actual ingredients," said Dr. Richard Desnoes, president of the Dermatology Association of Jamaica.

    Hardcore bleachers use illegal ointments smuggled into the Caribbean country that contain toxins like mercury, a metal that blocks production of melanin, which give skin its color, but can also be toxic.

    Some impoverished people resort to homemade mixtures of toothpaste or curry powder, which can stain skin with a yellowish tint.

    The Jamaican Ministry of Health does not have data on damage caused by skin-bleaching agents, though dermatologists and other health officials say they have been seeing more cases.

    Eva Lewis-Fuller, the ministry's director of health promotion and protection, is redoubling education programs to combat bleaching in this predominantly black island of 2.8 million people, where images of fair-skinned people predominate in commercials for high-end products and in the social pages of newspapers.

    "Bleaching has gotten far worse and widespread in recent years," she said. "(Bleachers) want to be accepted within their circle of society. They want to be attractive to the opposite sex. They want career opportunities. But we are saying there are side effects and risks. It can disfigure your face."

    Health officials are running warnings on local radio stations, putting up posters in schools, holding talks and handing out literature about the dangers. But a similar anti-bleaching campaign in 2007 called "Don't Kill the Skin" did nothing to slow the craze.

    The bleaching trend is sparking a growing public debate. Even dancehall reggae hits celebrate the practice, or condemn it.

    The most public proponent of bleaching is singing star Vybz Kartel, whose own complexion has dramatically lightened in recent years. His 'Look Pon Me' contains the lines: "Di girl dem love off mi brown cute face, di girl dem love off mi bleach-out face."

    Kartel, whose real name is Adijah Palmer, insists that skin bleaching is simply a personal choice like tattooing.

    Christopher A.D. Charles, an assistant professor at Monroe College in New York City who has studied the psychology of bleaching, said many young Jamaicans perceive it "as a modern thing, like Botox, to fashion their own body in a unique way."

    Others, however, say it raises awkward questions about identity and race.

    "If we really want to control the spread of the skin-bleaching virus, we first have to admit that there's an epidemic of color prejudice in our society," said Carolyn Cooper, a professor of literary and cultural studies at the University of the West Indies, writing in The Jamaica Gleaner newspaper.

    Felicia James, a 20-year-old resident of the Matthews Lane slum, said skin bleaching just makes her feel special, like she's walking around in a spotlight. She was taught to bleach by her older sister and her friends.

    "It's just the fashionable thing to do. After I bleach, I'm cris," she said, using a Jamaican term for cool. "Plus, a lot of the boys are doing it now, too."

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/cb_jamaica_skin_bleaching
     
  2. tunji oluwajuyemi

    tunji oluwajuyemi DI Forum Adept

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    Yep I saw that in Africa over 20 years ago early 80's,women with artificially light skin living under the equitorial sun...I more attracted to the darker skinned local ladies here in town with the smooth sheen that glistens from it in the sun..Special skin oils in dark skin protect from the sun producing some really nice reflection...some of the really black people in africa reflect a bluish or purplish sheen...Its just the right thing for sun climate..Even white people get darker in the sun as a rule of nature:Hot climate will make darker skin for the good of you...
     
  3. Phouston

    Phouston One Hit Wonder?

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    it is so sad to read stories like this, in my opinion it is okay to desire a lighter skin, but do it in the right process. bleaching does make your skin lighter but damages it as well. i am also a user of lightening products but i see to it that it won't harm or damage my skin. i'm currently using neucell skin lightener, this cream not only whitens the skin but also nourishes and protects the skin. i suggest you guys use it to. it is all natural, no harmful substances like of those of bleaching products contain.
     
  4. Manzanita

    Manzanita DI Forum Patron

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    The darker the berry, the sweeter the juice.
     
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