I have eczema on my hands. At it’s worst, my skin blisters. It becomes thick like leather. It cracks and bleeds. It hurts like a bastard. I’ve had this problem for a couple of years.
Having no insurance, I just bore it. I tried hand creams. My instinct told me to avoid chemicals, and so I switched all of my soaps to natural stuff - palm oil, glycerin, etc. No perfumes, dyes, alcohol, or petroleum derivatives.
I eventually found an affordable naturopath that prescribed a steroid cream. Yeah, I see the irony. I tried that, and it seemed to work. But, as soon as I ran out of steroid cream, the eczema came back… with a vengeance.
I thought it over. I realized that I’d done a pretty good job of limiting the eczema’s impact on my life by switching to natural products and limiting my exposure to chemicals. I found this stuff called ‘Badger Balm’ at a local store and tried it out. It is all natural and organic (for those that care about such things). I have been treating my eczema with great success by simply keeping my hands hydrated and sealed (it contains beeswax) with this stuff.
I talked with my naturopath about it, and she told me that this was the biggest factor in treating eczema - keeping it hydrated - especially with all of the pressure to sanitize oneself regularly. We constantly dry out our skin with solvents, detergents, and anti-bacterial solutions. Our skin needs moisture (as well as its natural defensive bacteria) to be healthy. If we take it away, we have to put it back. She agreed that doing so in a natural way was probably the safest and smartest approach.
I’ve found Badger Balm at Fred Meyer and New Seasons. I think that if you explore their website, it has a store locator function somewhere.
For the record, my grandma swore by Bag Balm. She (and by extension, we) used it all of the time to aid in healing, treat rashes, cool burns, un-chap lips, etc. It’s only since becoming an adult and a parent that I’ve started thinking more critically about the stuff that I slather on my body.