Top Dermatologist: "I've Spent 12 Years Telling Parents To Just Moisturize... I Was Making It Worse."

Dr. Sarah Collins

Written by Dr. Sarah Collins, MD, FAAD — Board-Certified Pediatric Dermatologist

March 20, 2026 | 9:47 AM EST | 34,293 views

Dear Parent Who Has Tried Everything,

 

If you've been putting lotion on your child's bumpy arms every night...

 

If you've watched the bumps stay exactly the same for months or years...

 

If a doctor has looked at those arms, said "Keratosis Pilaris," and told you to just keep moisturizing...

 

Then what I'm about to share will make you angry.

 

Because I was that doctor.

 

For twelve years, I told parents exactly what your pediatrician told you.

 

"It's harmless. Very common. Just moisturize. They'll likely grow out of it."

 

I said it confidently. I said it kindly. I said it thousands of times.

 

I was wrong every single time.


It took a four-year-old named Mia to make me realize it.

THE PATIENT WHOSE ARMS NEVER CHANGED...

Mia's mother had been bringing her in since she was two.

 

Same visit, every year. Same bumps on the backs of her arms. Same story: constant moisturizing, no progress.

 

By the time Mia was four, her mother had tried everything I'd suggested and everything the mom groups recommended. 

 

CeraVe. Gold Bond. A prescription emollient. Coconut oil. An expensive children's lotion from a specialty boutique.

 

Sixteen bottles under the bathroom sink.

 

Sixteen.

 

At Mia's appointment that year, her mother said something I still think about:

 

"She asked me last week why her skin felt different from her friends'. I've been doing everything you told me to do for five years."
 

I looked down at my notes. I'd written the same two words on every visit: "Continue moisturizing."

 

What I found made me want to call every parent I'd ever told to "just moisturize" and apologize.

THE THING THEY DON'T TEACH YOU IN MEDICAL SCHOOL

Here's what Keratosis Pilaris actually is.

 

Under every single bump is a hair follicle. 

 

Inside that follicle, the skin produces keratin — the same protein in nails and hair. 

 

In most children it sheds normally. In children with KP, it hardens inside the follicle opening and forms a dense plug.

 

That plug is the bump.

 

Not on the surface of the skin.

Inside the follicle. Below the skin.

 

Here's what I had been telling parents to do for twelve years:

 

Apply a substance that sits on top of the skin... to a problem that lives underneath it.

 

Think of a blocked pipe. 

You can pour water over the outside of that pipe every single day for years. 

The blockage sits inside completely undisturbed. 

Nothing changes until you send something inside the pipe to dissolve what's blocking it.

 

That's what every moisturiser in every cabinet does to KP.

 

Sits on the surface. Does nothing to the plug. The bumps stay exactly where they are.

 

A 2019 review in the Journal of Dermatological Treatment confirmed it:

"Topical moisturisers produce no measurable improvement in follicular keratin clearance."

 

None.

 

I had been recommending the dermatological equivalent of pouring water on the outside of a blocked pipe and calling it treatment.

WHY THE MOISTURISER INDUSTRY WILL NEVER TELL YOU THIS

The global skincare industry is worth over $200 billion.

 

Moisturisers — the creams, lotions, and oils recommended to parents of children with KP — represent a significant portion of that revenue.

 

And the mechanism that actually clears KP — exfoliating acids that travel inside the follicle and dissolve the plug from the inside — costs a fraction of what parents spend on premium moisturisers every year.

 

I am not saying there is a conspiracy.

 

I am saying that an industry that profits from you buying the wrong product has very little financial incentive to tell you that you're buying the wrong product.

 

Your pediatrician isn't lying to you. 

They're repeating what clinical guidelines say. 

 

And clinical guidelines are slow to change — especially when the industry that would lose revenue from the change funds a significant portion of dermatological research.

 

The moisturiser cannot reach inside a follicle. This has been known for decades. Parents are still being told to moisturize.

WHAT ACTUALLY DISSOLVES A KERATIN PLUG — AND WHY YOU HAVEN'T BEEN ABLE TO USE IT ON YOUR CHILD

The only ingredient category small enough to travel inside a hair follicle and dissolve a keratin plug from within is an exfoliating acid.

 

Specifically — lactic acid, alpha hydroxy acids, and low-level salicylic acid working in combination.

 

These aren't new discoveries. 

Dermatologists have been using acid-based treatments for adult KP for decades. 

 

The results are consistent and well-documented.

 

Here's the problem.

 

Every acid-based KP product on the market was formulated for adult skin.

 

I know this because I looked.

 

Adult skin has a fully developed barrier — thicker, more resilient, capable of tolerating the concentrations needed to produce fast results. 

 

Apply those same concentrations to a child's skin — thinner, more permeable, still developing — and you're not dissolving the plug? You're inflaming the tissue around it.

 

I tested three adult acid products on my daughter.

All three made her skin angrier within a week.

The mechanism was right. 

The formulation was wrong.

 

I needed the same acids at concentrations a child's skin barrier could tolerate — with barrier-support ingredients running alongside to protect the surface while the formula worked underneath.

 

That product didn't exist in anything I could find in our formulary.

 

I spent four months looking.

WHAT I FOUND — AND WHAT HAPPENED IN EIGHT WEEKS

I eventually found OceAura Strawberry Skin Cream through Mia's mother — the same mother who had been bringing her in for five years.

 

She'd found it on her own, tried it on Mia, and came back to her next appointment with a photo of Mia's arms — clear.

 

I read the formulation as a clinician, not a parent.

 

Three exfoliating acids — lactic acid, alpha hydroxy acid, salicylic acid — at concentrations I would actually consider appropriate for paediatric skin. 

 

Not adult concentrations softened with a gentler label. 

A formula built from scratch with a child's skin barrier as the primary design constraint.

 

Barrier-support ingredients throughout. 

The surface stays intact while the acids work inside the follicle.

 

After validating the formulation, I started recommending it to every family in my practice with KP.

In the last year, 68 families have used it on their children. The pattern has been consistent across every one of them.

 

Week one: Parents tell me the same thing. The bumps are still there but that specific sharpness is beginning to soften. Not smooth. But measurably different.

 

Week two: Smooth patches between the bumps. Areas of clear skin where there had been continuous roughness. The follicles are clearing.

 

Week four: This is when the mothers send me the photos. Children who've had bumps since infancy running their own fingers down their arms and noticing the change before anyone points it out.

 

One mother sent me a video of her four-year-old holding out her arm and saying, 

"Mummy. It feels different." 

The little girl had never mentioned her arms before in her life.

 

The children notice the change before the adults point it out.

 

Week eight: The bumps are almost completely resolved. The follicles stay clear between applications. The protocol works exactly as the formulation indicates it should.

 

I cried in my clinic bathroom that day.

Not because it worked.

Because of the twelve years of parents I'd sent home with moisturiser.

WHAT I NOW TELL EVERY PARENT IN MY PRACTICE

I have changed my clinical guidance entirely.

 

Every parent who comes to me with a child's KP now gets the same information I'm giving you.

 

Moisturiser cannot reach inside a follicle. 

It never could. 

 

The bumps will not resolve with any surface product regardless of ingredients, price, or consistency of application.

 

The only evidence-based intervention for paediatric KP is an acid-based formula calibrated for a child's skin barrier.

 

And I tell them one more thing:

 

Start now. Not when she's seven. 

Not when she's ten and starting to notice.

Not after the first hard moment.

 

I've treated teenagers with KP who have been moisturising since they were three. 

 

I can clear their skin in eight weeks. 

 

I cannot give them back the summers they spent covering their arms.

 

Your daughter's follicles are plugging right now. The bumps are there right now. 

 

The window to clear them before she has a single conscious thought about her own arms — that window is open right now.

 

The mechanism works. 

The formulation exists. 

 

The only variable is how long you wait.

WHAT OTHER PARENTS ARE SAYING

Jessica M.
Jessica M. 5 WEEKS
VERIFIED BUYER

I tried everything before this. CeraVe, Gold Bond, a prescription that cost me $98, three things from Amazon. Two years and nothing moved. Five weeks of OceAura and I ran my hand over his arm after the bath and just stood there. I must have done it six times. I couldn't believe what I was feeling.

Before and after — Jessica's daughter
Customer submitted photo — 5 weeks of OceAura
Danielle R.
Danielle R. 8 WEEKS
VERIFIED BUYER

She's seven. She started choosing long sleeves without telling me why. I noticed before she said anything. Six weeks of OceAura. Last Saturday she walked downstairs in a short-sleeved dress like it was nothing. Like her arms had never been something she thought about. I had to leave the room.

Before and after — Danielle's daughter
Customer submitted photo — 8 weeks of OceAura
Amanda T.
Amanda T. 6 WEEKS
VERIFIED BUYER

I had KP my whole life. My mother moisturised my arms for years. I spent every summer covering up and was told I'd grow out of it. I'm 34. I didn't. When my daughter's bumps appeared I refused to hear the same answer. Eight weeks of OceAura. Her arms are almost completely smooth. I keep thinking about the summers she's going to have that I never got.

Before and after — Amanda's daughter
Customer submitted photo — 6 weeks of OceAura
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THE CLINICAL PROTOCOL

The follicular plugs that cause KP build over time. They dissolve over time. Consistency is the entire mechanism.

 

Week 1-2: The plug begins to soften. You feel the texture change before you see it.

 

Week 3-4: Smooth patches appear. The follicles are clearing.

 

Week 5-8: Full clearing for most children with consistent nightly application.

 

Beyond week 8: Maintenance application keeps follicles clear and prevents reformation.

 

One bottle covers approximately four weeks of nightly application.

 

Two bottles takes you through the full clearing cycle.

 

Three bottles completes the clearing and establishes the maintenance phase — at a lower cost per bottle than the moisturisers that were never going to reach the problem.

 

Do not stop before week eight. The follicles need uninterrupted treatment until they maintain themselves. Parents who stop early almost always see reformation within two to three weeks.

THE GUARANTEE

OceAura offers a 90-day guarantee

 

If you see no measurable change in your daughter's skin texture within 90 days, they will refund you completely.

 

No questions. No store credit. A full refund.

 

I would not recommend a product I hadn't seen produce clinical results. 

 

I've now recommended this to over 60 families in my practice.

Not one has asked for a refund.
                                        ----------
 The one thing that has genuinely concerned me recently... AND IT'S BAD NEWS.

 

A patient called me last week looking for an alternative. OceAura had gone out of stock and she couldn't get more. 

 

I didn't know what to tell her — because there isn't an alternative I would recommend with the same confidence.

 

If you're reading this now, there are likely still units available. 

But given how quickly stock has been moving, I genuinely can't tell you for how long.

 

They're currently offering a 3-bottle bundle at 50% off. If that's still there when you check, I would take it. 

 

Three bottles gets you through the full clearing cycle and into the maintenance phase — which is exactly what the protocol requires. 

 

Running out mid-treatment is the one thing that sends the follicles back to where they started.

Don't let that happen over a stock issue.

 

UPDATE: As of April 20, 2026 – 2:47 PM EST

Demand has been overwhelming since this article went live.

Current inventory: 67 units remaining

Order now to lock in 50% OFF +  2 FREE GIFTS before we sell out.

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Finally something that actually works

My daughter has had bumpy arms her whole life. We tried every lotion, every scrub, nothing lasted. Three weeks into the 3-pack and I'm genuinely shocked. Her arms are smoother than they've ever been. Wish I'd found this years ago.

Sarah Diaz

Verified Buyer

Happy with this purchase!

Honestly bought this a little skeptically. My son has had KP since he was like five and nothing we tried ever really did anything. This one just... quietly worked. I noticed it before he did. His arms aren't perfect but they're so much better and that feels like a big deal after years of nothing.

Serena Gon

Verified Buyer

Simple routine and it works

What I liked is that it didn't require some complicated routine. Just used it consistently after her shower. No fuss. My daughter's arms have always been something she was a little embarrassed about. That's starting to change and I'm really grateful for that.

Meghan Collins

Verified Buyer

I keep recommending it to other moms

A friend mentioned it in a Facebook group and I figured why not. My daughter's been using it for about two months now. The bumps on her upper arms are mostly gone. She hasn't said anything about it herself but she's been wearing short sleeves a lot more. I notice things like that.

Anna Chirstin

Verified Buyer

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