16 Facts About Skin whitening

1.

Skin whitening, known as skin lightening and skin bleaching, is the practice of using chemical substances in an attempt to lighten the skin or provide an even skin color by reducing the melanin concentration in the skin.

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2.

Skin whitening lightening creams have commonly contained mercury, hydroquinone, and corticosteroids.

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3.

Several skin whitening agents, including tyrosinase inhibitors, have been found to cause an increase in the expression of tyrosinase, which by itself would increase melanin synthesis.

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4.

Antagonists of PAR2 inhibit the transfer of melanosomes and have skin whitening affects, while agonists of PAR2 have the opposite effect.

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5.

Skin whitening is a practice that has made its way across the entire globe with a multitude of cultures adopting the practice under various ideologies.

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6.

Skin whitening lightening practices had achieved great importance in East Asia as early as the 16th century.

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7.

Skin whitening'storians noted that as East Asian women immigrated to the United States, immigrant women engaged in skin lightening more frequently than women who did not immigrate.

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8.

Skin whitening'storians indicate that the social hierarchies in the Philippines encompasses a spectrum of skin tones due to intermarriages between indigenous populations, East Asian settlers from Japan and China, and European and American colonists.

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9.

Skin whitening practices have been documented in ancient Greece and Rome.

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10.

Skin whitening grew in popularity in the 1800s, as white women in the United States began to emulate the skin-whitening practices performed by those in Europe.

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11.

Skin whitening lightening was often not well-received; women who used skin whiteners were described as artificial, while men who used skin whiteners were described as overly effeminate.

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12.

Skin whitening'storians note that advertisements for skin whiteners in the 20th century often associated pale skin with gentility.

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13.

Skin whitening'storians credited the increased marketing of skin whiteners to the culture of the Jim Crow era, as black Americans faced continued social and legal restrictions.

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14.

Skin whitening practices have been well documented in South America and the Caribbean.

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15.

Skin whitening practices grew in popularity, partly as a consequence of blanqueamiento in Latin America.

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16.

Skin whitening'storians suggest that this may be associated with the passage of the Colored Labor Preference Act, in 1955.

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