Not Pick a Scab
Any time you get a cut or scrape, it’s likely that a scab will form. Even though it might be tempting to pick the scab off, it’s a bad idea because it can cause scarring, prevent the wound from healing properly, and even cause infection. To keep from tearing off your scab, keep it bandaged, distract yourself, and try to keep your fingers away from it.
Contents
Steps
Keeping Yourself from Picking Your Scab
- Cover it. Bandage it well. Let the skin heal naturally. Pulling off a scab can lead to scarring, infection and later problems with the wound healing. If you keep it covered, chances are you won’t have the temptation to try and pull off the scab.
- Distract yourself. Keep your hands busy so they aren’t picking at your scab. If you’re doing something else, it’s harder to pick your scab, and you might just forget it’s there if you do a good job distracting yourself.
- Cook
- Knit
- Clean something
- Ride a bike
- Go rock climbing
- Do yoga
- Read
- Listen to music
- Remind yourself not to pick at it. Put something on your hand to remind yourself — a stamp, a bracelet, a weird ring. Paint the nails on the hand you would use to pick the scab. Hopefully you will remember when you see your nails that you shouldn’t be near the scab. Even better, paint your nails black or green — something that really stands out — and don’t paint the fingernails on your other hand.
- Reward yourself for not picking your scab. Make a deal with yourself — if I go a day without picking my scab, I get X. Or if that’s too much time, make a deal where you reward yourself after half a day.
- Make sure you don’t have Stop-Picking-Your-Scabs disease. People who suffer from it compulsively pick at their skin and can’t help themselves. If you think it might apply to you, please consult a medical professional.
Dressing Your Wound
- Wash the wound with soap and water. It’s important to properly bandage it so that you can’t get at it to pick at it. Cuts and scrapes are common, and most of these will create a scab during the healing process. Try using glycerin soap rather than an antibacterial soap on your wound. Glycerin soap is better for hydrating and moisturizing your skin. Be gentle when washing the scab -- you don’t want to tear it. Pat the scab dry.
- Apply an antibiotic. Choose an antibiotic cream or ointment, available at any pharmacy. Keeping the scab covered in cream or ointment will speed up the healing and kill any germs that might remain in the wound. It might sting, but it’s going to help the wound heal better than it would without antibiotics.
- Cover your wound as it’s scabbing. Even though many of us have learned that you shouldn’t cover a wound, new research shows that it’s actually better to cover it. It will probably take at least four to five days for the scab to fully form and the wound to heal. Keep it covered for that period.
Caring for Your Scab
- Know why you shouldn’t remove your scab. When you scrape or break your skin, special blood cells called platelets begin to stick together and form a clot where you hurt yourself. These clots function like a protective bandage that keep the wound from continuing to bleed and to shield your body from the outside germs. Scabs serve an important purpose, and you need to let your body heal itself by forming a scab.
- Change the dressing on your scab daily. You will need to change the bandage any time it gets wet (which might be more than once a day). If it doesn’t get wet, choose a time daily to switch the bandage. Wash the scab gently and reapply the dressing.
- Inspect your scab for signs of infection daily. Is the scab changing color, getting puffy or oozing at all? Is the skin around the scab tender, red, or warm to the touch? These are signs of an infection that needs to be dealt with by a medical professional.
- Wait some time. Eventually, a scab falls off and reveals new skin underneath. Hopefully it will fall off by itself without you picking at it. This usually happens by itself after a week or two. If you are still having trouble getting your wound to heal, it is a good idea to check with your medical professional.
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Sources and Citations
- http://kidshealth.org/teen/your_body/medical_care/wounds.html#
- http://www.positivityblog.com/index.php/2007/11/19/how-keep-yourself-on-track-using-external-reminders/
- http://www.trich.org/about/skin-faqs.html
- ↑ https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/patientinstructions/000741.htm
- ↑ http://www.mayoclinic.org/first-aid/first-aid-cuts/basics/art-20056711
- http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/01/health/01real.html?_r=0
- http://kidshealth.org/kid/talk/yucky/scab.html