I react badly and don't use it anymore |
| Very rarely. I had never heard of it until I was about 35 — growing up my mom had Bactine, which stung so we would try hard not to tell our mom if we got a cut. Some water and a band aid always worked fine. |
| I don’t, but there are times when I use an antiseptic. I tend to use a chlorhexadine wash if it is that serious. |
| Most people have, or will, develop a bad reaction to Neosporin. Best bets include air, or a dab of Vaseline or bacitracin |
| I grew up with a jerk mother who loved mercurochrome. It stung so bad. I used to hide any cut or scrape and run to a friend or neighbors house to get bactine or soap and water and then hide it from her. Neosporin is great! |
That takes me back. Fortunately, mercurochrome has been taken of the market because of the mercury content. It turns out it never really worked that well and gave the illusion it was doing something because it left a red stain on the skin. |
| My derm recommended bactricasin (sp?) instead and had a reason I don’t remember, so that’s what I get now |
| My kid reacts to Neosporin, so we use Polysporin instead in our home. It does help in healing small cuts faster. |
Bacitracin |
This. Much faster healing. |
Same here. |
Recent studies don't back this up. |
Here's the study https://www.skinwellnessflorida.com/blog/deflating-neosporin-dermatologist-dr-anne-marie-tremaine-explains-why-you-should-choose-something-else/ |
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If it's something like a paper cut, I don't.
But when DD cane back from camp, she had a pencil eraser sized scrape on her to that had removed skin. She said she got it when swimming in a lake and ,no, she didn't clean it at all. Well I whipped out that Neosporin right away. |
I might be the odd one. I miss mercurochrome. It worked quite well. As for mercury poisoning, you needed to use it sparingly. |