This lamp doesn’t state that it produces any radiation further than UVA Though on the etch it says that it’s not 100% safe for long term exposure which I kind of doubt considering that most products nowadays warn you for every single thing even if that thing is impossible to happen :
For example most battery powered devices continuously warn people for the battery’s faults and you may even see some indication that says to not SWALLOW THE BATTERY!
Aaah, so the answer is incredibly simple: do not use this lamp as general lighting in a place where it shines into your eyes without UV protective film. With the film, it's all safe.
Be smart; those warnings would NOT have been put on that lamp, if the company didn't get sued for causing eye damage at some point in time, or if an engineer didn't ruin his eyes in testing lamps at some point. Warnings don't sell well, you don't put them onto products if you don't absolutely have to put them there.
Apparently there is something this lamp emits, that is not emitted by a blacklight tube, because blacklight tubes don't have these warnings.
Those battery warnings are there because many children have died from ingesting button cells. The warning is not for the children, but for the parents who simply never thought a child might think a little battery is a Skittle and swallow it. Or just put random things in their mouth, like kids do. Batteries are a more serious hazard than you might think. Button cells electrolyse the cells, causing perforations in the gut along the route the battery takes.
Here is an article about eye damage by UVA light:
https://platform.almanhal.com/Files/Articles/49506300kJ of UVA energy per square meter very roughly corresponds to a dual 36w fixture lighting up an area of 1m^2, which is quite a lot of energy - but the exposure time is much shorter because mice don't live as long as humans do. The nasty part is that it will take years for damage to accumulate and be noticeable. You don't notice it, until enough internal lesions have aggregated.
Here is an article specifically talking about the safety of 4 different types of lamp:
https://laser-led-lamp-safety.seibersdorf-laboratories.at/fileadmin/uploads/intranet/2003%20cie%20hazard%20assessment%20of%20lamps_%20weber.pdfThis article concludes that a 160w HPMV (i assume) blacklight lamp is safe, it does not go over the thresholds.
But you have to know if your UVA lamp gets into the actinic UV region or not, because actinic light is dangerous much faster. Try and find the datasheet of the lamp, and see if there is anything in the spectrum above 365nm. Because if there is, there's a higher risk. And there probably is. Otherwise it wouldn't have the warning.
Either way, here's my HPW 125w lamp:
https://www.lighting-gallery.net/gallery/thumbnails.php?album=8269Found it at work, not really using it because of the runup time and because it runs so much hotter than a CFL blacklight. Sooner or later i'm gonna buy another blacklight CFL and leave it at work, and take this one home because it's much more suitable as a collectable item, than as something to use for teaching.
https://www.lighting-gallery.net/gallery/thumbnails.php?album=8355And there's the Iwasaki H50 clear MV lamp, which also emits a bunch of UV light. Not UVC, but if it's not filtered by glass, it emits it. I use one of these in my room as lighting sometimes, but always with the UV protector.