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4 Tips for Baby Skin Care

By Betsy Riley
WebMD Feature

Your baby's soft, cuddly skin is different from yours. It's more delicate, more easily irritated, and more sensitive to temperature and sun. Though toddlers are a bit tougher, they can still get rashes or itchy spots. Here's what can you do to protect that sweet skin.

Limit Baths for Little Ones

Bathing a baby every other day is enough, says Dawn Davis, MD, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. More frequent baths can dry out your baby's skin. Infants under about 6 months old don't move around much, so they don't get into many messes. (Enjoy it while it lasts!)

Test bath water with your wrist to be sure it's warm, not hot. The inside of your wrist is the closest thing you've got to baby skin, says Davis. Fill the bath up to your baby's chest, rather than giving a sponge bath, so that your baby stays nice and warm. Of course, be sure you're holding him securely! Pat him dry, rather than rubbing his sensitive skin.

When kids start to crawl and eat solid food, they're ready for more frequent bathing.

Use the Right Soap Sparingly

For babies, use soap only on body parts that get dirtiest: the scalp, face, neck, hands, feet, and diaper area.  Gentle cleansers made for infants are best. Traditional body washes or bar soaps can be acidic and can irritate tender skin. Look for products labeled:

  • Tear free
  • pH neutral
  • No dye
  • No fragrance

Toddlers can handle more products, but they still do best with mild cleansers. "Toddlers can be messy," Davis says. "They think they're the boss of their bath time behavior, so they can get soap in their eyes or mouth."

Be sure to check a cleanser's list of ingredients, says Elaine C. Siegfried, MD, of Saint Louis University. The word "natural" on the front doesn't mean it's right for a baby. "Remember, poison ivy is natural," Siegfried says. "It's the back, not the front, of the package that counts."

Moisturize as Needed

Creams and ointments made for babies are good choices if your little one needs a moisturizer.  Their thick, rich texture may lock in moisture better than lighter products. Petroleum jelly works well, too. On tiny newborns, use any moisturizer sparingly.

Start Sun Protection Right Away

Babies' skin is paler, more sensitive to sun, and absorbs sunscreen more quickly than yours. Keep babies younger than 6 months covered up or out of the rays. If they absolutely need to be out in the sun, you can apply a small amount of sunscreen.

For older babies and toddlers, barrier sunscreens -- containing good old zinc oxide and titanium dioxide -- are best. They act like mirrors that block sun from ever reaching the skin.

Whatever you use, look for gentle formulas with SPF 30 or higher and reapply liberally every two hours. Avoid midday sun, and remember to watch out for reflections off of water or snow.

 

Reviewed on February 11, 2013

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