Recent data reveals an alarming trend: children as young as eight years old are now presenting with clinically observable obsessive skincare behaviours, according to mental health professionals documenting this emerging phenomenon. The timing coincides with unprecedented growth in the children’s skincare market, raising serious concerns about age-appropriate marketing practices targeting vulnerable young demographics.
Market expansion in the pediatric skincare sector has accelerated significantly, even as clinical referrals for compulsive beauty-related behaviours among children continue to rise. Mental health experts attribute much of this trend to targeted marketing strategies and influencer content on social platforms that promote elaborate skincare routines to increasingly younger audiences. The disconnect between marketing practices and child developmental psychology has prompted calls for greater scrutiny of beauty industry advertising directed at minors and stronger regulatory frameworks to protect children from age-inappropriate commercialisation.
Was this article helpful?

