babyDove sensitive skin care hypoallergenic lotion

lotion • For 5+ year old childrenSkin contact 🧴

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babyDove sensitive skin care hypoallergenic lotion - Front

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Ingredient List

babyDove sensitive skin care hypoallergenic lotion - Ingredients

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Is this kid-friendly to use babyDove sensitive skin care hypoallergenic lotion?

⚠️
USE WITH CAUTION
Danger Score: 4 (Lower is safer)
Quick Answer: babyDove sensitive skin care hypoallergenic lotion contains 17 ingredients. 2 caution. Use with Caution ⚠️ Kids may have different tolerance levels.

Check for Different Age (6 available)

Ingredients Analysis (17 found)

Triethanolamine
⚠️4/10
For children 5 years and older, this ingredient can cause skin irritation and allergic reactions in some kids. There is also a known worry about possible contamination with nitrosamines in some products. Overall risk is lower than for babies and toddlers, but caution is still needed.
Immune system - Multiple safety reviews note that triethanolamine shows evidence of immune and allergy effects in people, including reports of immune system or allergy concerns and respiratory allergic reactions (noted by cosmetic safety reviewers and occupational health assessments). This means it can affect the immune response in children who are exposed.
Irritant - A cosmetic safety review found strong evidence that triethanolamine is a human skin toxicant or allergen. That means it can cause skin redness, itching, or rashes—especially on sensitive or young skin.
Asthma - An occupational health review lists triethanolamine as a human respiratory toxicant or allergen, so inhalation or skin exposure may worsen breathing problems or trigger asthma-like responses in sensitive children.
Eczema - Because triethanolamine is reported as a skin allergen/toxicant, it can trigger or worsen eczema and similar skin conditions in babies and children prone to eczema.
Organ Risk - A national environmental agency classifies triethanolamine as expected to be toxic or harmful to non-reproductive organs, and regulatory toxicology notes animal studies showing effects at moderate doses. Repeated or high exposures could harm organs such as the liver or kidneys.
Banned - Cosmetic safety reviews and regional cosmetic rules place limits on how this ingredient may be used and at what concentrations, and some regulations restrict its use in certain products. This means some countries impose legal use or concentration limits.
Cancer - There is a high-listed concern about contamination with nitrosamines (a class of chemicals linked to cancer). While the ingredient itself is not judged likely to cause cancer, the potential for nitrosamine contamination raises a cancer-related risk from impurities.
Confidence: HIGH
Stearamide AMP
⚠️4/10
Stearamide AMP is not a recognized cosmetic or baby care ingredient name it may be a misreading or typo of stearamide or stearamidopropylamine.
Confidence: HIGH
Disodium EDTA
2/10
For children aged 5 and older (school-age kids), Disodium EDTA is generally low risk in the small amounts used in skin products. It is not tied to cancer or developmental harm in the available data. The most important issue is that it can irritate skin or eyes in some people.
Confidence: HIGH
Petrolatum
2/10
Safe for most school‑age kids when you pick a high‑purity, fully refined petroleum jelly and use it on healthy skin.
Confidence: MEDIUM
Phenoxyethanol
2/10
For school-age children (ages 5 and up), phenoxyethanol is commonly used as a preservative and is usually low risk when products contain it at low concentrations (around 1% or less). The biggest concern is irritation — some kids may get redness, stinging, or eye irritation.
Confidence: HIGH
Caprylyl Glycol
1/10
For school-age children (5 years and older), caprylyl glycol is generally safe when used on the skin in normal products like lotions and wipes. It has a low reported risk for cancer, developmental harm, and most allergies, and regulators consider it unlikely to build up in the body or the environment.
No Known Risk - Government and industry safety reviews found no clear health hazards for skin use. Tests say it is not likely to build up in the body, not persistent in the environment, and not harmful to organs. Industry reviewers do note limits on how much can be used and some data gaps, but overall the ingredient is rated low concern for topical use.
Confidence: HIGH
Carbomer
1/10
For school-age children (5 years and older) carbomer is usually safe when used on normal, unbroken skin. Most safety checks show low risk for cancer, allergies or effects on growth, but there are notes about possible impurities from manufacturing.
Confidence: MEDIUM
Cetearyl Alcohol
1/10
Cetearyl alcohol is a common ingredient in lotions and creams and is usually safe for children aged 5, older kids, and teens. Most experts say it is low risk when used on the skin.
Confidence: HIGH
Dimethicone
1/10
Dimethicone is commonly used on the skin and is usually safe for children ages 5 and up. Health reviews find low direct risk from dimethicone itself, but there are concerns about possible impurities and environmental persistence from regulatory reviews.
Confidence: MEDIUM
Glycerin
1/10
For children 5 years and older (kids, school-age children, teens), glycerin is usually safe when used in regular lotions, cleansers or wipes. It helps skin hold on to moisture and is not linked to major health risks.
Confidence: HIGH
Glyceryl Stearate
1/10
For school-age children (5 years and older) Glyceryl Stearate is generally safe. It’s used to make creams and lotions smooth and soft, and most health reviews find low risk for long-term harm.
Confidence: HIGH
Glycol Stearate
1/10
For school-age children (5 years and older): glycol stearate is generally considered low risk when used in normal skin products like lotions and creams.
Confidence: HIGH
Isopropyl Isostearate
1/10
For children aged 5 years and older, Isopropyl Isostearate is generally low risk when used on the skin in regular lotions or creams. Reviews find low concern for cancer, allergies, and harm to growth or reproduction. Some safety reviews rely on related chemicals and concentration limits, so a small amount of uncertainty remains.
No Known Risk - Reviewed safety assessments by an industry safety panel and a government chemical review found only low-level concerns (for cancer, allergies, development, and irritation). The industry review says the ingredient is safe in cosmetics when used with limits; the government review found it is not expected to harm organs or to build up in the body. There are some data gaps and the safety review used related chemicals in places, but no higher-than-low hazards were identified.
Confidence: MEDIUM
Magnesium Aluminum Silicate
1/10
For school-age children (5+ years), this ingredient is generally safe in creams, lotions and cleansers. It is usually an inactive ingredient used to thicken or stabilize products.
No Known Risk - Independent safety reviews and government assessments (Environment Canada and an industry safety review) find this ingredient is not expected to be toxic to organs, not likely to build up in the body, and show only low concern for cancer, allergies, or reproductive harm. A European chemicals agency notes limited evidence of respiratory irritation, but that finding is minor. Overall, no health hazards above a low level were identified for typical topical use.
Confidence: MEDIUM
Stearic Acid
1/10
Stearic acid is generally safe for kids aged 5 and up when used on the skin. It helps creams and wipes hold together and usually does not cause serious problems.
Confidence: HIGH
Tapioca Starch
0/10
For children 5 years and older (kids, children, teens), tapioca starch used on the skin is generally safe. It’s a natural powder used to absorb oil or make a product feel smooth.
Confidence: HIGH
Water
0/10
For kids aged 5 and up (school-age children, children, older kids), water used on the skin is very safe. It’s the basic ingredient in cleansers, lotions and wipes and carries very low health concern when clean and used in normal products.
No Known Risk - Regulatory reviews (Environment Canada) find plain water is not expected to be toxic, not bioaccumulative, and not an environmental toxin. Safety summaries list no concerns above a low level for organ harm, reproductive effects, or other long‑term risks for topical use, so no specific health risks are identified for use on skin.
Confidence: HIGH

Common Questions About babyDove sensitive skin care hypoallergenic lotion

Kid-approved? babyDove sensitive skin care hypoallergenic lotion

Use caution with babyDove sensitive skin care hypoallergenic lotion for 5+ year old children. Some ingredients may pose concerns.

What ingredients should I watch out for?

We analyzed 17 ingredients in babyDove sensitive skin care hypoallergenic lotion. 2 caution. Check the detailed analysis above for specific concerns.

When can kids start using lotion?

The appropriate age depends on the specific ingredients. This analysis is for 5+ year old children. Use the age selector above to check other ages.

⚠️ Important Disclaimers

Product Recognition: Product names are identified programatically and may be incorrect. Always verify product identity yourself.

Safety Analysis: Evaluations are for research only - consult pediatricians for medical decisions. Do not rely solely on this analysis.

No Guarantees: Results may be incomplete or inaccurate. Do not rely solely on this analysis.