Adult Eczema Treatment in Melbourne

Doctor-led diagnosis and practical treatment plans for adult eczema — including facial eczema, hand eczema, and stubborn flare-ups.

Adult eczema can be relentless: itch, cracked skin, sleep disruption, and flares that return the moment you think you’ve “fixed it”. The good news is that most adult eczema becomes much easier to control once you have:

  • the correct diagnosis (eczema vs contact dermatitis vs another rash), and
  • a clear plan for daily barrier care + flare treatment + relapse prevention. (1–3)

What is eczema?

Eczema is a general term for inflamed, irritated skin that tends to be dry, itchy, and reactive. The most common form is atopic dermatitis, where the skin barrier doesn’t work as well — meaning the skin loses water easily and becomes more sensitive to irritants and allergens. (1–3)

A simple analogy is dry mud cracking: when skin dries, tiny cracks form. Those cracks allow irritants to penetrate deeper, driving more inflammation and itch.

Eczema often comes in cycles — flaring, settling, then flaring again. The goal is not perfection; it’s control.

Start here: The Adult Eczema Toolkit

Common types of adult eczema (and why the distinction matters)

Many adults have more than one pattern at the same time.

Atopic dermatitis (classic eczema)

The most common pattern. Often associated with a personal/family history of asthma or hay fever. (3)

Contact dermatitis (very common in adults)

A rash caused by something touching the skin — either:

  • irritant contact dermatitis (soaps, detergents, wet work, sanitiser), or
  • allergic contact dermatitis (nickel, fragrance, preservatives, rubber accelerators, hair dye, etc.). (1–3)

This is especially important because contact dermatitis can look like “eczema that won’t go away” — and the treatment is different.

Hand eczema / dyshidrotic eczema

A very common adult problem: dry, fissured, painful hands and/or tiny itchy blisters on the sides of fingers/palms/soles. It often flares with sweating, stress, wet work, and irritants. (3)
Hand eczema frequently needs a stronger, more structured plan than people expect — especially if the skin is thickened or cracked.

Nummular (discoid) eczema

Coin-shaped itchy plaques that can mimic fungal infection. If lesions are round and persistent, assessment is important.

Why adult eczema happens (and why it flares)

Adult eczema is usually driven by:

  • a vulnerable skin barrier,
  • immune-driven inflammation, and
  • exposure to triggers (especially irritants and allergens). (1–3)

Common adult triggers include:

  • soaps, detergents, fragrances, sanitiser, wet work
  • sweating, heat, friction
  • stress and poor sleep
  • seasonal dryness / indoor heating
  • contact allergens (nickel, fragrance mix, preservatives, rubber, hair dye) (1–3)

If your eczema is persistent, localised (especially hands/face/eyelids), or keeps relapsing, contact allergy is often worth considering. (1–3)

What adult eczema looks and feels like

Symptoms vary, but commonly include:

  • intense itch (often worse at night)
  • dry, inflamed patches
  • cracking and fissures (especially hands)
  • thickened “leathery” areas from chronic scratching
  • flares triggered by irritants and stress (3)

Eczema can significantly affect sleep, mood, concentration, work performance, and confidence. Effective treatment is about quality of life, not vanity.

The foundation: daily care that reduces flares

Most adult eczema improves significantly when the basics are consistent:

  • Moisturise daily (even when calm)
  • Short warm showers, gentle cleanser only where needed
  • Fragrance-free routine across skincare and laundry
  • Hand protection for wet work and cleaning
  • Treat early at first itch/redness to stop escalation (1–3)


Step-by-step routine:

When medication is needed (and why “under-treating” backfires)

Moisturiser supports the barrier, but active flares usually need anti-inflammatory treatment to settle properly. (1–3)

Common options include:

  • topical steroids (short courses, right strength for the site) (1–3)
  • steroid-sparing creams like pimecrolimus (Elidel) / tacrolimus for sensitive sites (face/eyelids/folds) (1–3)
  • crisaborole (STAQUIS™) for mild–moderate eczema in adults (3,4)


Medication guide:

When to consider patch testing (adult game-changer)

If your eczema:

  • is mainly on hands, face, eyelids, neck,
  • flares with products/hairdressing/nail products/fragrance, or
  • doesn’t respond as expected,
    then allergic contact dermatitis may be contributing.

Patch testing can identify relevant allergens so you can stop treating symptoms and remove the trigger. (1–3)

Patch testing + triggers:

 

When to escalate beyond creams

Some adults have eczema that is widespread or resistant despite good care. Options may include:

  • specialist-supervised phototherapy
  • advanced systemic treatments in selected cases (3)

We can help you understand whether escalation is warranted and what pathway makes sense.

Advanced treatments:

When to seek urgent review

Seek prompt medical assessment if you notice:

  • rapidly spreading redness, warmth, swelling, pain
  • yellow crusting or pus
  • fever or you feel unwell
  • clusters of painful blisters or eczema suddenly becoming very painful (possible HSV complication) (1–3)


Infection guide:

FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Eczema is not infectious and cannot be spread to others. (3)

Hands are exposed to irritants all day (water, soap, sanitiser, cleaning). Hand eczema often needs a stronger plan including protection, correct topical strength, and sometimes patch testing. (3)

In adults, food allergy is an uncommon driver of eczema compared with children. If you suspect a clear pattern, it should be assessed properly rather than restricting broadly. (3)

Let's start

Book an appointment

If your eczema is affecting sleep, work, comfort, or confidence — or you suspect contact dermatitis or stubborn hand eczema — we can help.

Clinics: Ivanhoe and Diamond Creek

References

1.Australian Prescriber. Treatments for atopic dermatitis. 22 June 2023.
https://australianprescriber.tg.org.au/articles/treatments-for-atopic-dermatitis.html

2.Ross G. Treatments for atopic dermatitis. Australian Prescriber. 2023 (PubMed record).
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38053665/

3.Australasian College of Dermatologists. Atopic dermatitis (eczema).
https://www.dermcoll.edu.au/atoz/atopic-dermatitis/

4.NPS MedicineWise. Staquis (crisaborole) medicine finder (adult indication and 2+).
https://www.nps.org.au/medicine-finder/staquis