Doctors warn: Never Clean Your Child With Wet Papers

Every modern mother is dependent on wet paper because of the function they have to keep a hygiene as clean as a child's. Wet paper can be used anywhere in the child's face, body, hands, and private parts. But recent studies have shown that letters [...]
Every modern mother is dependent on wet paper because of the function they have to keep a hygiene as clean as a child's. Wet paper can be used anywhere in the child's face, body, hands, and private parts.
But recent studies have shown that wet children's letters are not the best choice you can use for your child's hygiene, and parents should consider them not to be used.
Wet paper is dangerous to your child's health. Furthermore, the prestigious NBC News Channel NeWs in a recent research reported that wet paper is not safe for your child's health because of a chemical contractor contains such a methylisothiasoline, which causes irritability and scratches in your skin.
A professor from the University of Connecticut, dermatology and pediatrics department, Dr. Mary Wu Chang experimented on this matter in different children and was intrigued by the results.
A little eight-year-old girl had scratched on her back and in the mouth. After many tests, they concluded that the wet letters had caused him to become this skin irritation.
Another case in Belgium, a man suffered a dangerous reaction from just the ingredient in wet paper. All children who had the same complications after stopping using wet letters and symptoms disappeared.
Dermatologist Dr. Ellen Frankel points out:
I always tell my parents not to use wet leaves for their children in any way. There's a lot of chemicals in them and they can continue to exacerbate the skin further”.
We suggest that you always read the labels behind the wet letters and look closely at whether the methythylisothiasoline is there.










