Who this is for
Persistent redness across the cheeks and nose, easy flushing, stinging skin, or acne-like bumps that creams worsen.
What it may involve
- Diagnosis vs acne & eczema
- Trigger identification
- Medical & light-based treatment
- A gentle, suitable skin routine

About rosacea & sensitive skin
Rosacea is frequently mistaken for acne or simply “sensitive skin”, and treated with products that make it angrier. The redness, flushing and small bumps across the central face have their own causes and their own treatments, so an accurate diagnosis is what separates calmer skin from years of frustration.

How we assess and diagnose it
Much of the consultation is practical detective work: identifying the triggers that set your skin off — heat, spice, alcohol, sun, certain products — alongside medical treatment to settle the inflammation. For the persistent background redness and visible vessels, light-based treatment on the cosmetic track can help once the medical side is controlled.

What treatment looks like
We also rebuild a gentle daily routine suited to reactive skin, because the wrong cleanser or active is often quietly fuelling the problem. The aim is skin that no longer flares at the smallest provocation.
- Accurate diagnosis vs acne/eczema
- Personal trigger identification
- Medical anti-inflammatory treatment
- Light-based options for redness
- A gentle routine for reactive skin
Book a consultation about rosacea & sensitive skin with a dermatologist.
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This page is general information about rosacea & sensitive skin and is not medical advice or a diagnosis. A consultation with a registered dermatologist is always required before any treatment. Clearbrook Skin & Dermatology is a fictional demo clinic built by SGBP.