ECZEMA SHAMPOO

shampoo & bodywash & conditioner • For 5+ year old childrenSkin contact 🧴

shampoo & bodywash & conditioner

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ECZEMA SHAMPOO - Front

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Ingredient List

ECZEMA SHAMPOO - Ingredients

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Is this kid-friendly to use ECZEMA SHAMPOO?

🚫
NO - AVOID
Danger Score: 23 (Lower is safer)
Quick Answer: ECZEMA SHAMPOO contains 20 ingredients. 2 concerning, 4 caution. Concerning - Has Problematic Ingredients ⚠️ Kids may have different tolerance levels.

Check for Different Age (6 available)

Ingredients Analysis (20 found)

Whole Egg Powder
🚨7/10
Whole Egg Powder can cause allergic reactions in children and is not appropriate for topical baby products likely included by mistake
Irritant - Whole egg powder can cause skin irritation or allergic reactions, especially in babies with egg allergies or sensitive skin.
Confidence: HIGH
Peppermint Oil
🚨6/10
Peppermint oil can cause skin irritation and sensitization in children especially in topical products like shampoo and bodywash for 5 plus years old.
Confidence: HIGH
Mentha Piperita Oil
⚠️5/10
Peppermint oil can cause skin irritation or allergic reactions in children and is often used for fragrance or cooling effect
Irritant - Peppermint oil is known to cause skin irritation, redness, and rashes, especially on sensitive baby skin due to its menthol content.
Asthma - The strong menthol vapors from peppermint oil can trigger or worsen breathing issues, including asthma, in sensitive children and infants.
Absorbed - Essential oils like peppermint oil can be absorbed through the skin, and babies have a higher skin absorption rate, increasing systemic exposure.
Confidence: HIGH
Cymbopogon Citratus Leaf Oil
⚠️5/10
Lemongrass oil can cause skin irritation or allergic reactions in children likely used for fragrance use with caution in 5 plus years
Irritant - Lemongrass oil contains citral, which is known to cause skin irritation, redness, or rashes, especially on sensitive baby skin.
Eczema - Essential oils like lemongrass can trigger or worsen eczema and similar skin conditions in sensitive individuals, including infants.
Confidence: MEDIUM
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
Lemongrass Leaf Oil
⚠️4/10
Lemongrass Leaf Oil is a known essential oil used in topical products but can cause skin irritation or sensitization especially in children. Use with caution in baby products.
Confidence: HIGH
Cocamidopropyl Betaine
3/10
For children 5 years and older, this ingredient is usually OK in shampoos and washes that are rinsed off. It helps make foam and clean without being very harsh for most kids. A small number of people can get skin irritation or allergic rashes, and regulators have raised concerns about possible contaminants from manufacturing.
Confidence: HIGH
Polyquaternium 7
3/10
For school-age children (5 years and up), this ingredient is usually low risk when used in normal rinse-off products like shampoos and conditioners. It is not a common cause of cancer or allergy, but there are concerns about how it is made and possible contamination.
Confidence: MEDIUM
Ethylene Glycol Monostearate
2/10
Ethylene Glycol Monostearate is used as an emulsifier and opacifier and is generally considered safe for topical use in children over 5 years
Confidence: HIGH
Ethylhexylglycerin
2/10
For children aged 5 years and older (school-aged kids, children, preteens), this ingredient is generally low risk when used on the skin at normal levels. The main issues are possible skin or eye irritation and, rarely, an allergic reaction in people who are sensitive.
Confidence: HIGH
Lauryl Glucoside
2/10
For children aged 5 and up, lauryl glucoside is generally a gentle, low-risk cleanser used in rinsing products like shampoos and body washes. Most kids tolerate it well.
Confidence: HIGH
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
Ceteareth 20
2/10
For children aged 5 and up (school-age kids), Ceteareth-20 is usually low risk in finished skin products. The main issues are possible contamination with chemicals called ethylene oxide and 1,4-dioxane, and the fact this ingredient can help other ingredients get through the skin. Overall it is safer for children 5+ than for babies or toddlers, but some caution is still wise.
Confidence: MEDIUM
Aloe Barbadensis Leaf Juice
1/10
For children 5 years and older (school-age kids, older children, teens), aloe vera leaf juice used on the skin is generally safe and low risk. It is commonly used to soothe and hydrate skin in lotions and wipes.
Confidence: HIGH
Aloe Vera
1/10
Organic Aloe Vera is widely used in baby products for soothing and moisturizing and is considered very safe for topical use in children over 5 years
Confidence: HIGH
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
Propanediol
1/10
For school-age children (5 years and older) propanediol is generally low risk. It’s used to hydrate skin and help ingredients mix. A few safety reviews say it can sometimes irritate skin and can help other ingredients get through the skin more easily.
Confidence: HIGH
Coconut Oil
0/10
Coconut oil is widely used in baby care for moisturizing and is safe for topical use in children over 5 years
No Known Risk - Coconut oil is widely used topically for babies and is generally considered safe. There is no strong evidence linking it to irritation, allergies, hormone disruption, cancer, or other health risks when used on healthy baby skin. Rare allergic reactions are possible, but not common enough to warrant a risk label based on current research.
Confidence: HIGH
Colloidal Oatmeal
0/10
For school-age children (5 years and older), colloidal oatmeal is generally safe to use on the skin. It’s often used to calm dry, itchy, or irritated skin and has very low safety concerns in the provided safety data.
No Known Risk - The ingredient's safety review shows only low-level concerns for cancer, allergies or immune effects, developmental/reproductive harm, and use limits. No hazards above low were identified for topical use in the available review, so no significant health risks were found.
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 ECZEMA SHAMPOO

Kid-approved? ECZEMA SHAMPOO

ECZEMA SHAMPOO is not recommended for 5+ year old children due to potentially harmful ingredients.

What ingredients should I watch out for?

We analyzed 20 ingredients in ECZEMA SHAMPOO. 2 concerning, 4 caution. Check the detailed analysis above for specific concerns.

When can kids start using shampoo & bodywash & conditioner?

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.