Rosacea is medically known as rosacea, which can be treated with topical medications such as fusidic acid, mupirocin, and metronidazole as prescribed by your doctor. If the effect of topical drugs is not satisfactory, it is recommended to take oral doxycycline, minocycline and other tetracycline drugs as prescribed by the doctor, or take physical therapy and other ways to improve. 1. Topical medication: For papulopustular rosacea, topical fusidic acid ointment, mupirocin ointment, and antibiotic medications such as clindamycin gel can help reduce inflammation and sterilize the skin. Metronidazole can resist follicular helminth mites and is effective for moderate to severe erythema and inflammatory lesions. 2. Oral medication: For patients with rosacea, tetracyclines such as doxycycline and minocycline can be taken orally under the guidance of a doctor to help reduce inflammation and sterilize the skin. 3. Physical therapy: including pulsed dye laser and intense pulsed light, etc., which can help improve the local erythema and capillary dilation of the patient, and has better efficacy for rosacea. For patients who need to use medication to treat rosacea, it is recommended to go to a regular hospital to consult a doctor and use the medication under the doctor’s guidance, and do not abuse the medication.