top of page

Children's Dry Skin: Itching Back, Causes, Symptoms, and Home Remedies


It cannot be easy to find the correct remedy for your children's dry skin. Because children's skin is more sensitive and dries out more quickly than adults, they are more prone to itchy, red, rough, or peeling skin or itching back. Relief doesn't have to be expensive. These easy and inexpensive remedies will work to soothe your child and keep skin healthy. In this article, we'll discuss the causes of dry skin in children and how to treat it.


Children's Dry Skin Symptoms


The arm, lower leg region, and sides of the belly have the driest skin. The intensity of the dryness affects the other symptoms. The following are some of the signs and symptoms:


Mildly dry skin

  • The skin has a rough look and is mildly scaling.

  • Mild redness with minimal discomfort

Moderately dry skin

  • Scaling of the moderate skin

  • Itching and redness are mild.

  • Skin with minor blemishes and lines

Itching and severe scaling

  • Redness and dry patches of skin accompany the pain.

  • Bleeding from the skin's cracks

  • Back itches all the time


Dry Skin in Children: What Causes It?


Mild to moderate skin dryness can occur for various reasons that aren't life-threatening and can reduce this dryness with the use of home remedies and precautions. The most common cause of dry skin in children are:


  • Extreme weather: Your child's skin may become dry due to extreme cold or heat, causing a drop in humidity levels. Your child's skin will become dry as their body loses water. This could result in cracks in the heels and the skin on the soles of the feet peeling away.

  • Air conditioning and heaters: Children who spend more time inside air conditioning or heaters are more likely to have dry skin. Air conditioners and heaters tend to suck moisture out of the air, contributing to dry skin.

  • Tight clothing: Children's dry skin can be induced or worsened by wearing a tight dress. Friction between the skin and the clothing may cause skin dryness.

  • Bathing and swimming frequently: Taking long showers or baths in hot water, or swimming for long periods in chlorinated pools, can deplete the skin's lipid barrier, leaving it dry and scaly.

  • Dehydration: Not drinking enough water can cause your child's skin to become dry, with dry and chapped lips being one of the most visible indicators of dehydration.

  • Using harsh soaps: The pH of the skin's surface ranges from 4.5 to 7.5, and using acidic or alkaline soaps might change that pH and induce dryness. In addition, many soaps and detergents remove the skin's natural lipids, which can cause dryness. Using artificial chemical-laden detergents and shampoos might also dry up your child's skin.

Dry skin in children can be treated at home.

If your child develops mild to moderately dry skin due to any factors mentioned above, these home care tips may help.

  • To stay hydrated, make sure your child drinks enough water throughout the day.

  • When the weather is bad, try to keep your bathing time to ten minutes or less.

  • Ask that your child bathe in lukewarm water and refrain from using soap that contains chemicals that dry the skin.

  • As soon as your child pats their body dry after a bath, apply a moisturizing moisturizer.

  • If you have itching and scaling on your skin, apply a body lotion three times a day.

  • If your child spends much time indoors in air conditioners, a humidifier should be used all of the time to keep them hydrated.

  • Make sure kids use a water-resistant moisturizing cream all over their bodies before jumping into the pool.

  • Limit your child's swimming time to 15-20 minutes, and tell them to take a bath straight afterward to get rid of the chlorine, which can cause skin dryness.

  • Encourage children to use sunscreen on the skin that may come into contact with the sun.

  • Allowing your children to scratch itchy, dry skin can result in bleeding and infection. Instead, use a cold compress to relieve the itching.

  • Apply moisturizer to areas of the body where there is greater friction from clothing, such as the abdomen, armpits, kneecaps, and so on.

Recent Posts

See All

What Causes an Itching Back & How to Treat It!

Itching is a bothersome sensation that causes you to scratch your skin. It can feel like discomfort at times, but it is not. Itchy backs are surprisingly frequent and can cause much pain. You may get

Types and Causes of Back Acne and Itching Back

Acne on the back, sometimes known as "bacne," can be extremely bothersome. Acne or pimples, no matter where they appear, can be challenging to treat. Unfortunately, having spots isn't only a teen prob

bottom of page