Ultraviolet risk in elite sport requires policy integration: implications for the 2026 World Cup

Authors

  • Jonathan de Rothewelle Department of Clinical Medicine, Ross University School of Medicine, Miami, Florida, United States of America

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18203/issn.2455-4529.IntJResDermatol20261943

Keywords:

Ultraviolet radiation, FIFA, 2026 world cup

Abstract

Ultraviolet radiation is a well-established cause of photoaging and malignancy, yet sun protection remains absent from elite sport even as FIFA adds cooling breaks and physicians publicly push for stronger heat protocols ahead of the 2026 World Cup. Roughly 1,200 athletes, plus coaches and officials, will play summer matches across high-UV regions. Predicted mean UV indices were calculated across all 2026 host cities using NASA satellite data, with values ranging from 6-10 (high to extreme risk). FIFA’s medical regulations address heat exposure but not UV. Feasible, low-cost fixes—standardized sunscreen provision, reapplication education, UV-informed scheduling—could close this gap using infrastructure FIFA already has. The World Cup offers dermatology a rare, high-visibility platform to model occupational sun-safety policy.

References

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Published

2026-06-22

How to Cite

de Rothewelle, J. (2026). Ultraviolet risk in elite sport requires policy integration: implications for the 2026 World Cup. International Journal of Research in Dermatology, 12(4), 390–391. https://doi.org/10.18203/issn.2455-4529.IntJResDermatol20261943