Updated
Updated · Men's Health · Jun 15
Rowan Jacobsen Says 10-15 Minutes of Daily Sun Can Boost Health in New Book
Updated
Updated · Men's Health · Jun 15

Rowan Jacobsen Says 10-15 Minutes of Daily Sun Can Boost Health in New Book

2 articles · Updated · Men's Health · Jun 15

Summary

  • Jacobsen’s new book argues moderate daily sunlight exposure can improve longevity and lower mortality, challenging blanket warnings that any unprotected sun is harmful.
  • Epidemiological studies he cites link regular sunlight to benefits including vitamin D production and lower blood pressure via nitric oxide, while framing sun deficiency—not routine exposure—as the bigger modern risk.
  • The book distinguishes chronic exposure from intense intermittent burns, saying office workers and people who get occasional beach burns face higher melanoma risk than farmers with steady outdoor exposure.
  • Jacobsen also argues early sunscreens blocked UVB but not UVA, helping explain why skin cancer rose alongside sunscreen use before broad-spectrum products became standard.
  • His practical guidance is individualized, but he says a fair-skinned person in summer may need about 10 to 15 minutes to reach a vitamin D sweet spot near 25 ng/ml, while fair-skinned people with red hair or many moles need extra caution.

Insights

Why might an office worker face a higher melanoma risk than a farmer who is constantly in the sun?
Is your sunscreen protecting you from one health risk while potentially creating another?