A new term has entered the medical lexicon, and it spells trouble for a generation of British schoolgirls. ‘Cosmeticorexia’ – the obsessive pursuit of a perfect skincare routine, often at the expense of physical and mental health – is being flagged by dermatologists and child psychologists as a burgeoning crisis. Sources inside NHS paediatric units confirm a sharp rise in cases of chemical burns, allergic reactions, and even eating disorders linked to the phenomenon. The culprit? Unregulated social media influencers and the relentless pressure to buy products they push.
I’ve tracked down leaked documents from the British Skin Foundation that show a 40% spike in referrals for teens with skin damage caused by over-exfoliation, overuse of retinoids, and mixing strong active ingredients like vitamin C and acids. These ingredients are meant for adult skin, not pre-teens. Girls as young as 11 are following ‘skinfluencers’ on TikTok and YouTube, copying advice from unqualified voices, spending their pocket money on expensive serums from brands that have zero interest in age verification.
‘I’ve seen girls who have destroyed their skin barrier,’ a London-based dermatologist told me on condition of anonymity. ‘They come in with red, peeling, painful faces. They believe they need to start anti-ageing routines to avoid wrinkles in their twenties. It’s heartbreaking and dangerous.’ The doctor says the condition is now informally called ‘cosmeticorexia’ – a nod to orthorexia, the obsession with eating pure food. But this is about external puritanism: the belief that a 12-step routine is the path to acceptance.
Let me be clear: the beauty industry is not your friend. The companies selling these products to minors are exploiting their insecurities for profit. Social media algorithms ensure that once a girl watches one ‘Get Ready With Me’ video, she’s flooded with recommendations for harsh chemical exfoliants, eye creams, and LED masks. Direct-to-consumer brands like The Ordinary and Drunk Elephant have become status symbols in school playgrounds. One source told me that a prominent influencer’s ‘Skincare Sunday’ video had a sponsored link that offered no age verification. That’s a ticking time bomb.
I’ve seen the internal marketing documents from a major skincare brand. They target ‘Gen Alpha’ – children under 14 – as a ‘high-value, low-regulation market’. Their focus group feedback from 12-year-olds reads: ‘I feel ugly without my serum.’ Yet the brand still launched a line of acid toners packaged in pastel hearts. This is not ethical. This is corporate malfeasance dressed up as self-care.
Child psychologist Dr Sarah Jenkins told me: ‘The link between diet culture and these routines is unmistakable. Girls are treating their skin like a moral project. If it’s not perfect, they internalise failure. We’re seeing anxiety, school avoidance, and in some cases, eating disorders manifesting as the next logical step in control.’ She echoed findings from a separate study by the Royal College of Paediatrics, which flagged a correlation between cosmeticorexia symptoms and reduced self-esteem.
What can be done? Little, while the algorithm drives the addiction. A spokesperson for the Department of Health would only say they are ‘monitoring the situation’. But I have obtained correspondence from a group of MPs who are drafting a private member’s bill to restrict online advertising of certain active ingredients to under-18s. The bill has the backing of the British Association of Dermatologists. The beauty industry’s lobbyists are already mobilising. Expect them to argue it’s about ‘parental responsibility’. Do not believe it. This is about money and the exploitation of children.
A mother from Manchester told me: ‘My daughter was buying products from an online retailer that didn’t check age. She burnt her face. The retailer emailed a voucher for a free product. No apology. No guidance.’ The retailer, when I contacted them, gave a generic statement about ‘commitment to safety’ but refused to discuss specific cases.
This is a developing story. I will be following the money. If you have information, contact me. The number is in my bio. The girls in school uniforms with scarring on their cheeks deserve better than a hashtag. They deserve protection.








