Sunscreen provides 100 per cent protection against all three types of skin cancer and also safeguards a so-called superhero gene, a new study has found.
Queensland University of Technology researchers say their study will end the academic debate about the effectiveness of sunscreen in preventing skin cancers.
The study shows sunscreen provides 100 per cent protection against all three forms of skin cancer: basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma and malignant melanoma.
It also shields the so-called superhero p53 gene - a gene that works to prevent cancer by repairing sun-damaged skin.
"As soon as our skin becomes sun damaged, the p53 gene goes to work repairing that damage and thereby preventing skin cancer occurring," lead researcher Dr Elke Hacker says.