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26Oct/10Off

Mom won't buy me skincare products?



I have acne. I often get big red pimples. Right now, I probably have 10-12 small pimples spread throughout my face. I had to practically beg her to buy me a cleanser. When I ask her if I could buy an acne spot treatment or a light moisturizer or toner, she says I just have to wash my face. I do, but it doesn't matter. She says don't touch your face. I don't want expensive products and my acne isn't that bad. I think if I put some care into it, I could have flawless skin. And I do have the money to buy these things myself because of baby-sitting but my mom would have to be the one to take me to the store. I do have an older sister, but she suffers more than me and has prescription creams. How can I convince my mom? and what is a skincare routine I should follow. Thanks!!



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  1. Your mom should let you start a skin care routine. The acne could leave scars that will not go away for a long time. Since you have Internet access. I have copied an article on Childhood Acne and how important it is to treat it. Please ask your Mom to read it and to help you and your sister get the right treatment for you. Good luck to both of you.

    Childhood Acne
    Acne in childhood is not a normal pattern of presentation of acne. However, adolescent acne has become quite common in older children in the 8-12 age group, leading to a move to differentiate childhood acne from pre-teen acne. Cases of acne in children require medical investigation in order both to identify the cause of the acne and to provide appropriate treatment.
    Definition of Childhood Acne
    Childhood is the period of life which falls between infancy and adolescence. The developmental progression baby – child – adolescent dovetails neatly with the concept of the clinical types of acne. The incidence of acne is extremely low in the period between infancy and adolescence Infantile acne is the predominant clinical type of acne in infancy, whilst adolescent acne, caused by the hormonal changes associated with puberty, has a strong association with adolescence. There aren’t any clinical types of acne which are preferentially associated with childhood, so the incidence of acne is very low in the period between infancy and adolescence. However, preserving the clinical relationship when defining acne age distribution types requires a little bit of trickery. Infancy is a fixed period of time, defined arbitrarily by doctors as the first 12, 18 or 24 month of life. In contrast, adolescence is a moveable feast. Adolescence is the period which marks the transition from child to adult, encompassing both the physical changes of puberty and the more prolonged period of development to intellectual and emotional maturity. There is considerable variation in the age of onset of adolescence and its duration, not just between individuals, but also between cultures and during different periods of history. Turn the clock back two or three generations and there was a good correlation between clinical adolescence and the chronological teenage period. However, the average age of the onset of puberty has dropped gradually, but inexorably, over the course of the last century so that the relationship between teenage and adolescence no longer holds true. To accommodate the lowering in the average age of adolescence, an additional acne age distribution group is required, pre-teen acne, which is the development of acne in someone aged between 8 and 12. After conducting this bit of jiggery-pokery, one can define childhood acne as the development of acne in a child aged between one and eight years of age.

    Causes of Childhood Acne
    Childhood acne is rare, because children ordinarily have inactive sebaceous glands and are therefore missing one of the key ingredients, seborrhoea, implicated in the development of acne spots. Sebaceous glands become active during puberty, stimulated by the same sex hormones which cause the development of the external genitalia and other physical changes associated with puberty. The commonest clinical type of acne in childhood is still adolescent acne, though of ‘pathological type’. In terms of the type and distribution of spots, the presentation of adolescent acne is the same in teenagers and children. However, whilst adolescent acne is a normal occurrence in pre-teens and teenagers, it is abnormal in a child and requires urgent investigation. Many cases of adolescent acne in children will be associated with pathological precocious puberty – the early onset of puberty caused by an underlying medical condition, either an endocrine disorder or a hormone-producing tumour. Child acne may be caused by other clinical types of acne, but drug-induced acne is the only type responsible for a significant number of cases. Parents should have been informed if their child has been prescribed medication which causes acne as a side-effect and will usually be alert to the possibility that the acne is drug-induced.

    Significance of Acne in Children
    Acne in children is not normal and should be treated seriously. It is imperative that the child is examined by a doctor and the underlying cause of the acne identified. Following an initial consultation with a General Practitioner, it is likely that the child will need to be referred to a specialist, who can investigate and treat the underlying condition which has caused the acne.

  2. why don’t you buy it yourself. jeez stop whining and do something about it.

  3. i have acne too! i use shiseido’s 3 step system for teens, it comes in blue bottles. there’s one for a cleanser, then a softener, and a moisturizer. i also use prescription meds, in the morning i use BenzaClin and at night i use Retin-A. Well if your older sis has prescription creams why can’t you get it too? Tell your mom it’s going to take more than just washing ur face and not touching it to get better. trust me my face got better after about 2 weeks of using the stuff.

  4. Get a facial.
    & compare your skin to others and try to make her feel bad. My mom did and it worked :)

  5. Neutrogena Advanced Solutions is the best stuff. I had worse acne than you, like 40-50 of them on my face. Gross! It got rid of ALL of them, and my face has been clear ever since- it even glows now. Give it a week or two to fully take effect.

    It’s about 20 bucks at Walmart, you could buy it yourself just have someone drive you there, it comes in a box with 3 bottles in it. Good luck!


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