Evidence-Based Dermatology

Your skin.
Understood.

From identifying your type and triggers to treatments that actually work. Written by dermatologists, not content mills.

31M+ Americans with eczema
1 in 3 Children affected
$5.3B Annual US treatment cost
Dermatitis affects roughly 30% of children and 10% of adults, yet most people still don’t understand what type they have, what’s triggering their flares, or that effective treatments exist beyond basic moisturizer.
Close-up of healthy skin texture and barrier function

Dermatitis is a broad term for skin inflammation that presents in several distinct forms. The most common, atopic dermatitis (often called eczema), involves a genetic defect in the skin’s protective barrier that allows moisture to escape and irritants to penetrate.

Contact dermatitis, by contrast, is an immune reaction to specific substances your skin touches. Seborrheic dermatitis targets oil-rich areas like the scalp and face. Each type has different triggers, different progression patterns, and responds to different treatments.

Getting the right diagnosis matters more than most people realize. A moisturizer that helps atopic dermatitis may do nothing for contact dermatitis if you haven’t identified and eliminated the allergen causing it.

The skin barrier is not just a wrapper. It’s an active immune organ. When ceramides and filaggrin are deficient (as in atopic dermatitis), everything from dust mites to fragrance can trigger an inflammatory cascade.
10% of adults live with atopic dermatitis worldwide
Board-certified dermatologist

The single biggest mistake I see is steroid phobia. Patients suffer for months because someone online told them topical steroids are dangerous. Used correctly, they’re safe and effective. The real danger is undertreating eczema and letting the itch-scratch cycle destroy your skin.

Board-Certified Dermatologist
BuiltForAI Healthcare Advisory

Expert Articles

View All →
Loading

Loading articles...

Eczema Severity Assessment

Answer 8 questions to understand your dermatitis severity and get personalized recommendations.

Question 1 of 8

Note: This is an informational assessment, not a medical diagnosis. Always consult a healthcare provider for medical advice.

Frequently Asked

Eczema and dermatitis are often used interchangeably. Dermatitis is the broader medical term meaning skin inflammation. Eczema typically refers to atopic dermatitis, a chronic condition involving dry, itchy, inflamed skin linked to immune dysfunction and an impaired skin barrier. Other types include contact dermatitis, seborrheic dermatitis, nummular dermatitis, and dyshidrotic eczema.
Common triggers include dry air and low humidity, irritants like soaps and detergents, allergens (dust mites, pet dander, pollen), certain fabrics like wool, stress, temperature swings, and in some cases certain foods. Triggers vary widely between individuals. Keeping a symptom diary or working with a dermatologist on patch testing can help identify your specific triggers.
When used correctly under medical guidance, topical steroids are safe and effective. The risk of skin thinning is often overstated and is primarily associated with using high-potency steroids on thin-skinned areas (face, groin) for extended periods without breaks. Your dermatologist will match the steroid potency to the body area and recommend treatment schedules that minimize any risk.
See a dermatologist if over-the-counter moisturizers and 1% hydrocortisone aren’t controlling your symptoms after 2 weeks, if eczema covers large areas of your body, if you’re losing sleep from itching, if you see signs of infection (oozing, crusting, warmth), or if the condition is affecting your quality of life. You can find a dermatologist near you through DrFinder.ai.
There is no cure for atopic dermatitis, but it can be effectively managed to the point where flares are rare and mild. Many children outgrow it by adolescence. For adults with persistent moderate to severe eczema, newer treatments like biologics (Dupixent/dupilumab) and JAK inhibitors (Rinvoq/upadacitinib, Cibinqo/abrocitinib) have dramatically improved outcomes. Consistent skin barrier maintenance remains the foundation.
No. Eczema is not contagious. You cannot catch it from someone else or spread it through contact. It’s driven by genetics, immune dysfunction, and environmental triggers. However, eczema skin is more susceptible to infections (like staph or herpes), and those infections can be contagious.
Ceramide-based creams (CeraVe Moisturizing Cream, Vanicream) are generally recommended because they replace the lipids eczema skin lacks. Plain petrolatum (Vaseline) is the most effective occlusive for sealing moisture. Colloidal oatmeal products (Aveeno) help with itch. Avoid anything with fragrance, dyes, or alcohol. The best moisturizer is the one you’ll actually use consistently.
Dermatitis Assistant
AI-powered skin health guidance
Hi! I can help answer questions about dermatitis, eczema types, triggers, and treatments. What would you like to know?