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Guide · Skin conditions

Eczema (Atopic Dermatitis) in Ireland — Patient Guide

Atopic eczema affects about 1 in 5 Irish children and 1 in 12 adults. Here is the evidence-based approach to managing flares and preventing them.

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What is eczema?

Atopic eczema (atopic dermatitis) is a chronic, relapsing inflammatory skin condition. It affects roughly 1 in 5 Irish children and 1 in 12 adults per HSE estimates. It is part of the "atopic triad" alongside asthma and hay fever — these conditions often run together in families. Most childhood eczema improves with age but can persist into adulthood; adult-onset eczema is also increasingly recognised.

Symptoms and pattern

  • Itching — often the most distressing symptom, worse at night
  • Dry, scaly skin patches — typically in skin folds (elbow creases, behind knees, neck, behind ears)
  • Red or inflamed areas, sometimes weeping or crusting during flares
  • Skin thickening (lichenification) from chronic scratching
  • Sleep disruption and impact on mood
  • Babies often present on face and scalp; older children/adults on flexures

Common triggers

Per NICE CKS:

  • Skin irritants — soaps, bubble bath, detergents, fragranced products
  • Heat and sweating — including overheating from too many bed covers
  • Fabrics — wool, synthetics often irritate; cotton is gentler
  • Stress
  • Viral and bacterial infections — can trigger flares
  • Aeroallergens — dust mites, pollen, animal dander (in some patients)
  • Food allergens — only in a minority of young children (typically milk, egg, peanut); routine elimination diets not recommended without confirmed allergy

Treatment — the stepped approach

Per NICE and HSE guidance:

1. Daily emollients (foundation)

The single most important intervention. Apply generously (think "litres a week" for severe cases) several times a day, even when skin looks clear. Use as soap substitute. Different formulations suit different people — ointment is greasiest and most effective but cosmetically heavier; creams are lighter.

2. Topical corticosteroids (flares)

Used in courses during flares — short, decisive treatment is more effective and safer than prolonged weak treatment:

  • Mild (hydrocortisone 1%) — face, genitals, infants
  • Moderate (clobetasone) — body folds, mild-moderate eczema
  • Potent (mometasone, betamethasone) — body, severe flares, short courses

Apply once-twice daily for typically 7-14 days during a flare. Used appropriately, topical steroids are safe — concerns about skin thinning relate to long-term continuous use of strong steroids on thin skin.

3. Topical calcineurin inhibitors

Tacrolimus or pimecrolimus — steroid-sparing options useful for face or long-term use.

4. Add-ons

  • Antihistamines for itch-related sleep disturbance
  • Antibiotic treatment for confirmed bacterial superinfection
  • Wet wraps for severe flares (under specialist guidance)
  • Specialist referral for severe or refractory eczema — phototherapy, systemic agents (dupilumab and others)

Infection — important to recognise

Eczema can become bacterially infected (gold-yellow crusting, increased redness, weeping, fever) or virally infected — particularly eczema herpeticum (small painful blisters, fever, generally unwell) which is a medical urgency. Eczema herpeticum needs same-day in-person care and oral antiviral treatment.

Online Doctor consultation

An eczema consultation covers: severity assessment via photo, prescription of appropriate emollients and topical steroids, advice on routine, identifying triggers, and referral pathway if severity warrants. For suspected infection (especially eczema herpeticum), in-person assessment is appropriate.

Sources: HSE.ie, NICE CKS Eczema, Irish Skin Foundation, ICGP.

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Emollients are foundation

Daily moisturiser routine — even when skin looks clear — keeps the barrier intact.

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Topical steroids in flares

Right strength for the body site, applied as short courses. Safe when used properly.

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Identify triggers

Soaps, fragrances, fabrics, stress, infections — knowing yours reduces flares.

Frequently asked questions

Are topical steroids safe long-term?
When used appropriately — short courses of the right strength for the body site — yes. Concerns about skin thinning relate to inappropriate long-term continuous use of strong steroids on delicate skin (face, genitals).
Will my child grow out of eczema?
Most children see significant improvement by puberty. About 30-40% have some persisting symptoms into adulthood, often milder. Early effective management improves long-term outcomes.
Do I need allergy testing?
Routine allergy testing is not recommended for typical eczema. Allergy testing is appropriate when a specific trigger is suspected (e.g. severe eczema in a baby with possible food allergy) and where results would change management.
Can I use steroid cream on my baby?
Yes — mild topical steroid (e.g. hydrocortisone 1%) is appropriate for short courses on inflamed eczema in babies, including on the face. Long-term continuous use is avoided.
What is the new injection treatment for eczema?
Biologic therapies like dupilumab are licensed in Ireland for moderate-to-severe eczema not controlled by topical therapy. Access is via dermatology specialist services.
Should I avoid bathing my child?
No — daily baths can help if you use emollient as soap substitute, keep water lukewarm (not hot), bathe briefly, pat dry, and apply emollient within 3 minutes. Avoid bubble bath and standard soap.

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