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Eczema 104: How to Protect & Treat Eczema Naturally

Another great post from itchylittleworld.com – Natural remedies for eczema to soothe your itchy little world..

In the previous part of this series, Eczema 103: How to Heal Eczema From Within, we discussed how to heal the body from the inside out. Now we’re going to discuss how to treat eczema naturally.

Please keep in mind that although these tips and information have worked for several sufferers, we are in no way medical professionals. If you’re experiencing severe symptoms or have a topical infection, it is always best to seek medical advice immediately.

Prevent Scratching

In many cases, the most difficult thing to tolerate about eczema is the constant itch and the desperate need to scratch. It can be all consuming! And while you may be good at not scratching during the day, you may unknowingly scratch while you sleep and open new wounds or worsen existing wounds. So, the first step to treat eczema naturally is to wear scratch protective clothing like eczema mittens and gloves.

For kids, this may mean wearing something like these ScratchMeNot Flip Mitten Sleeves. Or perhaps eczema gloves in soft bamboo. And for pajamas, there are plenty of sleep sacks and pajamas for eczema that come with attached mittens to prevent harmful scratching.

For adults, there are tops with built in mittens (trying getting out of these while you sleep!) and bamboo eczema gloves.

Treat With Natural Skincare

Since healing from within can take some time to see results, you may find you need to treat your skin topically with natural skincare to find relief in the interim. Not all products labeled as “natural” really are, so read your labels and watch out for the following ingredients which are toxic and/or common skin irritants.

Ingredients to Avoid

  • Alcohol of any type (too drying and can cause burning)
  • Fragrance/Parfumes
  • FD&C Colors and Pigments
  • Petroleum
  • Parabens
  • Phthalates
  • PEG’s
  • Propylene glycol
  • Phenoxyethanol
  • Cocamidopropyl betaine
  • Sodium benzoate
  • Dimethicone
  • SLS, SLES, ALES, ALS – all sulfates

Treat By Symptom

Because symptoms can overlap between the various types of eczema, it’s usually most effective to determine the best course of treatment based on the symptoms rather than by the type of eczema.

For Itchy/Red/Dry Eczema

Among all eczema symptoms, these seem to be the most common. Eczema can be found in patches of chronically itchy, red and dry skin. Find products formulated for itchy, red dry eczema.

For Red/Weeping Eczema

This eczema is characterized by patches of angry looking red skin that can also be crusty or can ooze or weep. Find products formulated for red, weeping eczema.

If you are suffering from Topical Steroid Withdrawal (TSW), your skin symptoms usually fall into this category. If you’re new to our blog and currently going through TSW, check out some of our posts that focus on topical steroid withdrawal.

For Thick/Scaly Eczema

Eczema that appears in patches usually ends up thickening over time, especially with lots of scratching, causing a crocodile skin type effect. Find products formulated for thick, scaly eczema.

Moisturizer & Balm

With eczema, because the skin barrier is damaged, it’s important to repair it topically with an emollient that keeps the skin moist and also offers some wound healing properties, like any of the following products which are gentle, but great for all eczema symptoms. To help prevent eczema, apply a moisturizer once a day. To treat eczema naturally, apply moisturizer at least twice a day and ALWAYS after a bath or shower or hand washing or anytime water makes contact with the skin. To get you started, here are a few of our favorite emollients:

Organic Manuka Skin Soothing Cream is one of our favorites and The Paleo Mom’s too! It combines only six simple, natural ingredients – Organic Olive Oil, Organic Beeswax, Filtered Water, Grape Seed Oil, Organic New Zealand Manuka Honey and Manuka Oil Extract – to create an extremely thick balm with a unique, nourishing creamy texture. Read more about why Manuka honey heals eczema naturally.

Tallow Balm is another really simple, gentle nourishing balm we highly recommend. It’s made with grass fed tallow, so it’s both pure and highly nutrient. Tallow is great for even the most sensitive of skin.

Conqueror Eczema Balm has a nice simple base of oils which carries a blend of very highly effective essential oils formulated for multiple eczema symptoms. You should expect to see long lasting hydration and relief with this balm.

Organic Calendula Salve is a lovely product with one very powerful ingredient, which you can guess by the product name, calendula! This powerful flower is known for wound healing, itch relief, topical pain relief and reducing inflammation to name a few. Read about Why You Should Try Calendula For Eczema Relief.

Bathing

A really important step in treating eczema is to determine how your or your child’s skin handles bathing. Some people find relief with daily baths and some find more than once a day too drying and irritating. Like everything else with eczema, bathing frequency is best determined with trial and error to find the best results for you. Another thing to remember about bathing is that it will help keep the surface of their skin clean and free of bacteria or other irritants that may have stuck to them throughout the day. However, it’s important to note that warm baths, as cool as you can stand, are ideal whereas hot baths can be detrimental to your skin and are best avoided.

Bleach baths are a common recommendation for eczema, but bleach itself is a harmful chemical and not something we promote when trying to heal the skin. Instead, check out these bleach bath alternatives you can try at home.

In terms of soap, moderation is key. Simply put, avoid soap unless you absolutely need it without a shadow of a doubt. When you can simply rinse the skin with water, this is best. However, if you are dealing with a topical infection or open wounds and sores, soap can be critical, so it’s important to find a mild, gentle soap that is fatty, moisturizing and will strip the skin of it’s natural oils as little as possible. And it must be noted that all soap will dry the skin, but some are less offensive than others, which is what you want to use. The following are our recommendations for the best eczema soaps.

Emily’s Liquid Soap Soother & Body Wash contains eczema fighting Chinese herbs in a rich fatty base. A bonus – it can be doubled up as a shampoo! Another great alternative is this nourishing Grass Fed Tallow Soap for sensitive and allergy prone skin.

Try Dry and Wet Wrapping

Although in no way a cure, wet and dry wrapping can offer a much-needed break from itching and dryness. And honestly, I’ve never seen anything provide such fast relief.

For dry wrapping, simply apply a layer of cream on the skin and following with a dry layer of clothing. The clothing helps cream permeate into the skin. Read more about dry wrapping in Our Eczema Trials: Dry Wrapping.

For wet wrap therapy, it’s a bit more of a process, but results are faster and more intense, so it’s definitely worth the extra effort. To wet wrap you’ll need to take a bath in lukewarm water (no soap!), followed by a layer of cream, followed by a damp layer of clothing, followed by a dry layer of clothing. Once again, the clothing keeps the moisture from the cream or balm locked in, which not only provides a cooling sensation, but allows the skin to heal quicker. But the difference here is the dampness of the clothing, which intensifies the moisturizing effects. It’s for this reason that we don’t recommend using any topical medication when wet wrapping without a physician’s prior approval. Read more about wet wrapping in Our Eczema Trials: Wet Wrap Therapy.

While cotton clothing can work for wet wrapping, we’ve seen better results with TENCEL fabric clothing made especially for wrapping. WrapESoothe is a line of wet wrapping garments made with TENCEL, check out their bands/sleeves for adults and children, one piece suits for babies to toddlers and children’s tops and bottoms. For more options, check out these wet wraps for eczema relief.

For Children with Eczema

Eczema in babies or children is extremely difficult to deal with, because as parents seeing our children suffer is devastating and there isn’t anything we wouldn’t do to help give them relief. The owner of this blog, Jennifer, battled her son’s eczema for years and found certain natural eczema treatments that dramatically improved his skin. She created this blog to share her story and those stories of other parents in order to help support families in their search for skin healing. Read about Jennifer’s story here.

Learn about what ended up helping Jennifer’s son heal in Natural Remedies for Eczema – What Worked For My Son.

Finding Support & Encouragement

For everyone either going through eczema themselves or as a caregiver or parents tending to a child with eczema, know that you are not alone. We encourage you to reach out to others – do not suffer in silence. The National Eczema Association has an online support group that is wonderful resource. Managing eczema can be stressful, emotional, painful and all consuming, but it doesn’t have to control your life.

ECZEMA DOES NOT DEFINE YOU.

We have some wonderful posts all about the emotional impact of eczemawe hope you’ll read them and that they will give you strength, confidence and courage as you continue on your healing journey.

That’s the end of our four part Educational Eczema Series. If you missed any of the posts in the series, check them and a bunch of other essential posts about eczema on our Start Here for Eczema Relief page.

Let us know how YOU treat eczema naturally!

Share your stories and successes with us in the comments below!

Eczema 104: How to Protect & Treat Eczema Naturally appeared first on itchylittleworld.com. Come read more about natural remedies for eczema!

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How to Avoid Catching Or Spreading a Rash to Another Person – Ways to Protect Yourself and Others

Not all rashes are contagious. For instance, eczema, food allergies, medication dermatitis and insect bites are generally not passed on to another person. However, there are certain rashes that can be spread including scabies mites rashes, fungal rashes, fever blisters and chicken pox. In addition, certain rashes can be spread to another part of your own body. This is why scratching a rash is discouraged. Of course scratching a rash can also lead to bacterial infections as well.

If you have a child in school, teach him or her to not ever touch someone’s sore, blister or rash. Kids enjoy showing something odd on their bodies to other kids. But this is not something that is a good idea to touch. A cold sore virus, fungal rash or pox can be caught by touching a blister in this manner. Kids are fearless often and interested in oddities. Teach them to avoid touching someone’s sore, bruise, cut, pimple or red skin patch.

Certain types of rashes, once treated are no longer contagious. For instance, after applying the perscription cream for scabies someone can return to school or work after 24 hours. Other rashes require healing from an infection or virus before returning to one’s place of employment or school. Good hygiene is important to avoid spreading or catching a rash. It is tempting to scratch one’s rash and this not only can cause certain rashes to spread to other people, but may also cause another eruption somewhere else on your body. Scabies can be spread to other parts of your body and herpes simplex virus 1 also can cause a breakout elsewhere on the body via touch or scratching.

Most school systems will send out a note when there is a problem of a communicable disease, but this is not always the case. Also people may be contagious before having their diagnosis.  Also due to assuming that one’s rash is just a simple mosquito bite, a rash may be ignored for a week before consulting a physician.

Learn about common rashes and how to treat with traditional and holistic approaches. Stop by to read articles on School Rash problems as well as Types of Eczema to get informed.

Related Atopic Dermatitis Articles

How secured emails protect Healthcare industry file exchange

Need to exchange files in health sector:

File exchanges in the health care sector is a common affair that needs to be done with complete security. There is a constant need to exchange medical data and records about a patient, when he or she is going to shift from one hospital to another for treatment. Transferring data, medical bills and reports is not that easy. There is a high chance of data breaching and thus the risk of data loss or data theft. Especially when there is a constant need to share information in the medical sector, the sharing medium should be highly efficient and secure.

woman-using-white-laptop-lavender-background-sm

Problem with emails:

The conventional methods of data transfer are not that great when it comes to security. Emails are one of the most common forms of sending data in a medical sector. Email ids can frequently be hacked and thus the data can be stolen. Email can never be secure as hackers are continuously finding new ways to enter into your system. So even if the email id is secured, then there also stays the risk of data loss. Even if you change your passwords frequently and impose a lot of security features, the risk is still there. With modern methods that are coming up, the risk of your emails being hacked is very high. In other words, there is nothing like secured emails. Also there is the pain of sending files within a limited size limit. All this makes email one of the most risky places to send confidential and sensitive data. Gone are those days when email was the only form to transfer all the medical data.

Other modes of data transfer:

Other forms of data transfer include faxing machines, CD, DVDs, FTP transfer which are not that great when it comes to security. The process is hectic and quite complicated especially when the volume of data is too large.

Advantages of using Fax over IP solution:

So if one is looking for a secured way of data transfer then the best way can be fax over IP solution. This is one of the trusted mediums to send data as and when required. The high end IP based solution securely transfers all the data after it is encrypted. The data encryption is systematically done in both the uploading and downloading processes without any hassle. The exchanged files are safely kept in a virtual safebox from where the records can be retrieved as and when required. The best part of this data transmission method is that it is completely secure and you are free from the hassle of maintaining fax machines. Data is encrypted and can easily be decoded. The best part of this method is the easy user interface. It is as easy as sending an email . This can be quite useful when you are sending large volumes of data without any hassle. So adopting to online fax based solution can really resolve the problem of data transfer.

Protecting healthcare file exchanges is not that easy. Every medical record of an individual has to be kept in a systematic way. The data kept should be easily accessible as and when required. All these features combined with high end security are safe to send confidential data from one health sector to another via online fax based solutions. So get rid of emails and adapt to mediums like online fax based solution for secured data transfer.

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