For diagnosed eczema in infants, oral medication can be given as paracetamol for children under 6 months of age, and centrum drops for infants over 6 months of age, with the exact dose calculated according to the child’s kilogram weight. For topical medication. Different solutions are chosen for different lesion states. For areas that are runny, a wet application of boric acid solution is used. It is important to note that small infants should not apply wet compresses on a large area, as this may lead to boric acid poisoning, and only small wet compresses should be applied. The wet compress can be followed by a topical zinc oxide paste. For more serious cases, the body temperature should be monitored and routine blood tests should be performed to clarify whether there is any infection. If there is an infection, internal antibiotics should be applied (antibiotics are prescribed by the pediatrician). External antibiotic ointment can be Bactrim or erythromycin eye ointment. For non-flowing water, topical stove glycolic lotion, and hormonal creams such as Eudragit and Elocon can be used. In addition, there is a very important complementary treatment for infant eczema. The skin lesions should be treated with baby moisturizer several times a day. Medical skin care products are recommended, such as Avène Triple Repair Cream (available at large pharmacies. For the record, it is not an advertisement, but only to provide a better complementary treatment), which should be used 6-8 times a day, and also in places where water is running, interspersed with the cream, at intervals of more than half an hour. Because of the dry weather in the north in winter and spring, the skin damage area should first repair its skin barrier function. Smear emollient cream is a good kind of auxiliary treatment.