I'm trying to get a good estimate of the risks associated with sun exposure.
I'm assuming things scale linearly (the UV index units, which need a name ("UVees"?) are linear).
This may not be a good assumption, but it seems somewhat likely that it would be within the range I most care about (significant exposure, but not enough to get burnt -- if I'd get burnt, I'll certainly cover up or wear sunscreen).
I know sun exposure is a major source of skin cancer risk, but I'm not sure how much of that is coming from people who have tons of exposure, and how much risk a moderate level of exposure actually brings.
About 20% of Americans develop skin cancer during their lifetime, and the 5-year overall survival rate for melanoma is over 90 percent. Taking this as the mortality risk, i.e. ignoring timing and varied risk levels, it's a 2% risk of (eventual) death.
But risk of skin cancer depends on far more than sun exposure - and the more important determinant is frequency of sunbathing below age 30. Other factors that seem to matter are skin color, skin response (how much you burn,) weight, and family history of cancers.