Doctor’s Warning: Never Clean Your Child With Baby Wipes No Matter What & Here Is Why

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Baby wipes are a necessity for parents, as they come in handy when you need a quick cleaner-upper. They’re convenient to take on the go – not only for diaper messes, but also for sticky hands, faces, and even toys. Up to this point, we always assumed they were completely safe to use. But more and more research is surfacing that baby wipes aren’t necessarily always the best thing for our children’s skin.

According to NBC News, a study has surfaced that shows that some baby wipes are not safe to use on your children due to one key ingredient. The results of the tests conducted were worrisome, as children ended up having a reaction that left them with itchy, scaly, and red-rashed looking skin.

An associate professor of dermatology and pediatrics at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Dr. Mary Wu Chang, was the co-author of this official study conducted. She experimented with many different children, and in the end, six unique reactions caught her attention.

One eight-year-old girl ended up having a severe rash on her buttocks and also around her mouth. Due to the location of where the reaction was located on the little girl’s body, Dr. Chang narrowed the problem down to the baby wipes that were being provided to her. She asked the little girl’s mother what exactly she was providing her daughter to clean with, and the mother confirmed she gives her baby wipes.

Remembering a previous report Dr. Chang stumbled upon during her research, another case where a Belgian man had a severe chemical and allergic reaction to a chemical preservative called methylisothiazolinone – Dr. Chang linked this preservative to the exact baby wipe reaction as the little girl.

To be sure, Dr. Chang tested the little girl to see if she was officially allergic to this particular chemical, and sure enough, her test came back positive. The solution was simple; the mother stopped using the baby wipes immediately, and all of the little girl’s rashes successfully cleared up.

Over the next year and a half, Dr. Chang found similar reactions in five other kids. Thanks to the successful conclusion of the first little girl, Dr. Chang had the five sets of parents cease using baby wipes on their children, and their rashes went away as well.

Another dermatologist, Dr. Ellen Frankel, also agrees with Dr. Chang that parents should be careful using wipes on their children. She advised:

I always tell parents take caution using baby wipes. They have a lot of chemicals in there, and can irritate skin that’s already damaged sitting in urine, or feces, or sitting in a diaper that’s just got an inclusive surface on it.

To make sure this harmful chemical is not going to cause the same problems for your child, look at the ingredients on the side of the baby wipe box. If you see the chemical methylisothiazolinone, you may want to stop using those wipes.

Many responsible store brands have already removed methylisothiazolinone from their products. Although prepackaged wipes are the most convenient way to keep your children clean, if you find your child develops a rash, there are other solutions such as creating your own DIY wipes at home with natural products, or simply using a cloth with warm water.

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