I recommended MooGoo skin balm to someone who's daughter suffers from 'orrible psoriasis and gets prescribed steroid creams all the time It wasn't better than the steroid stuff but it was as good and doesn't have parabens, phenoxyethanol (or steroids) etc etc in. It's basically food grade almond, olive, aloe, chamomile, sage and hops oils and extracts emulsified.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Wed Nov 09, 2022 4:12 pmI have dry skin issues too...I find that the fancier a product is, the worse it is for me! The best thing is plan old hospital grade Cetraben, which I reckon you could also use to do the pins on sliding brake callipers. The "extras" in other products are detrimental for me.Count Steer wrote: ↑Wed Nov 09, 2022 3:54 pmI'd be cross, true. I'd also be cross if, after years of having skin issues on my hands, I found that I had lanolin dermatitis exacerbated by the 'safe' lanolin and parabens in the prescribed treatments and they were making things worse. (I haven't, but I do wonder about cases like TPs dad, where 'nothing worked' until....).DefTrap wrote: ↑Wed Nov 09, 2022 3:20 pm I'm pretty sure that the active ingredients of 'marigold' have been clinically tested, probably not in a blinded trial because there's not really any point. As you say, there is some historical evidence that it works, for some, in some cases, but the efficacy is secondary to the safety. If it works for you, that's great, but you'd be mighty cross if it melted your skin off.
I guess there's safe and 'read the contra-indications sheet' safe.
(I used to need it if I swam in chlorinated pools too often but I found a low chlorine one ).