Excoriation Disorder

Skin Picking Disorder in Children, Teens, and Adults

Natalie Noel, LMHC | Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists | Tampa, FL

You tell yourself you will stop after this one. Then this one becomes the next one, and the next, and suddenly an hour has passed. The skin on your face, arms, or fingers is raw. You feel a wave of shame. You promise yourself it will not happen again.

And then it does.

If this is your experience, you are not alone and you are not broken. Excoriation disorder also called skin picking disorder or dermatillomania is a recognized medical condition affecting an estimated 1 to 5 percent of the population. It is not a hygiene problem or a character flaw. And it responds very well to the right treatment.

At Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists, we help children, teens, and adults overcome excoriation disorder in Tampa, Florida, and virtually across Florida.

In-person sessions are provided in Tampa and virtual sessions are available throughout Florida and New York.

Quick Answer: What Is Excoriation Disorder?

Excoriation disorder is a body-focused repetitive behavior involving compulsive picking at the skin including pimples, scabs, bumps, calluses, or healthy skin. It is classified under Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders in the DSM-5. It is not a choice or a bad habit. It is a neurologically driven condition that requires specialized behavioral treatment to address effectively.

What Is Excoriation Disorder?

Excoriation disorder is more than picking at a pimple. People with this condition feel a powerful, often irresistible urge to pick at their skin. The urge can be triggered by a real or perceived imperfection, a texture they want to remove, stress or boredom, or it can happen completely automatically without the person realizing they have started.

Like other body-focused repetitive behaviors, skin picking usually provides brief relief or a sense of satisfaction. That short-term payoff is what makes it so hard to stop. The brain learns that picking reduces discomfort.

Excoriation disorder is not a hygiene issue. It is a real, recognized condition driven by brain chemistry, sensory needs, and emotional regulation not willpower or character.

Signs of Excoriation Disorder

Signs of excoriation disorder can look different from person to person. Common signs include:

Excoriation Disorder Is Not Self-Harm

Skin picking is sometimes confused with self-harm, but they are driven by different things. Self-harm is typically motivated by a desire to feel pain or punish oneself. Excoriation disorder is driven by urges, tension relief, and sensory needs not a desire to hurt.

The distinction matters because the treatment approaches are different. If you are unsure whether what you are experiencing is excoriation disorder or self-harm,a proper assessment with a trained specialist is the most important first step.

What Triggers Skin Picking?

Understanding your triggers is a key part of treatment. Triggers are different for every person but they tend to fall into five main categories:

Trigger TypeExamples
SensoryFeeling a bump, rough patch, or texture on the skin that feels "wrong" or needs to be removed
EmotionalStress, anxiety, boredom, frustration, or feeling emotionally numb picking to regulate feelings
CognitiveThoughts like "I just need to fix this one spot" or "I cannot leave it alone"
EnvironmentalSitting near a mirror, being in the bathroom, or having tools like tweezers nearby
AutomaticPicking that happens with no awareness during focused tasks, while drifting off, or while driving

Most people with excoriation disorder have more than one trigger type. The Comprehensive Behavioral Treatment (ComB) model the gold standard for skin picking treatment maps your specific triggers and builds a plan around them.

Excoriation Disorder in Children and Teens

Excoriation disorder often begins in childhood or the early teen years. Puberty is a common onset point when acne and new skin concerns create more perceived “imperfections” to pick at. But skin picking can start even in younger children.

In Younger Children

In children under 10, skin picking may look like picking at scabs, bug bites, or hangnails. It is often automatic and connected to restlessness, anxiety, or boredom. Parents may notice more skin wounds than seem typical, or that the child picks compulsively even when told to stop.

Early intervention leads to better outcomes. If your child is picking frequently and cannot stop when asked or is showing distress about it it is worth consulting a specialist.

In Teenagers

Skin picking often becomes more complex and shame-driven in teens. Adolescents are acutely aware of their appearance, and the combination of acne and compulsive picking can create intense distress. Teens may spend long periods in the bathroom, avoid social situations, or refuse to let anyone see their skin.

Teen excoriation disorder also frequently co-occurs with anxiety, OCD, ADHD, or depression. A thorough assessment helps identify what is fueling the behavior and ensures treatment targets the full picture.

Many teens with excoriation disorder have been told to ‘just leave it alone’ or ‘stop touching your face.’ This advice, while well-meaning, does not work and often adds shame to an already difficult experience. The right treatment gives teens actual tools to change the behavior, not just reasons why they should.

For Parents: How to Talk to Your Child or Teen About Skin Picking

Do not react with disgust, anger, or repeated reminders to stop this drives secrecy with the behavior.

Do not point out picking in the moment in front of others this increases shame.

Do say calmly: ‘I have noticed something and I want you to know I am not upset. I want to help.’
Do validate how hard it is: ‘I know this feels really hard to control. That is what therapy is for.’

Ask their therapist how you can support them at home without inadvertently making things worse.

Limit access to magnifying mirrors and picking tools at home your therapist will guide you on this.

Seek evaluation early. Excoriation disorder that starts in childhood can become deeply ingrained without treatment. Early help leads to better long-term outcomes.

What Causes Excoriation Disorder?

How Is Excoriation Disorder Treated?

Excoriation disorder requires specialized treatment. General talk therapy is rarely effective on its own. At Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists, we use the most evidence-based approaches available.

The Comprehensive Behavioral Treatment Model (ComB)

ComB is the gold standard for excoriation disorder. It begins with a detailed assessment of your specific trigger types sensory, emotional, cognitive, environmental, and automatic and then builds a personalized plan targeting each one. ComB does not use a one-size-fits-all protocol. It is tailored to you and your symptoms.

Interventions may include stimulus control (changing your environment to reduce triggers), competing responses (doing something with your hands that is incompatible with picking), sensory substitution (meeting sensory needs in less harmful ways), and awareness training.

Habit Reversal Training (HRT)

HRT is the foundational behavioral treatment for all BFRBs, including excoriation. It focuses on building awareness of the behavior and practicing a competing response when urges arise like pressing fingernails into a palm, squeezing a textured object, or rubbing lotion on the skin instead.

CBT for Underlying Anxiety or OCD

When excoriation disorder occurs alongside anxiety, OCD, or depression which is common treating those conditions as part of the same plan leads to better outcomes. We assess and treat the full picture.

About Medication

There is no FDA-approved medication specifically for excoriation disorder. However, some medications including SSRIs and N-acetylcysteine (NAC) have shown benefit in research and may be helpful, particularly when anxiety or OCD is also present.

We are therapists and do not prescribe medication. If medication may be appropriate for you or your child, we will refer you to a trusted psychiatrist and coordinate care. Behavioral therapy ComB and HRT remains the most effective treatment for excoriation disorder and is where we focus.

What to Expect When You Work With Us

Most people see meaningful improvement within 3 to 4 sessions. Some see results sooner. The timeline depends on how long excoriation disorder has been present and the intensity of picking.

In-Person and Virtual Sessions

In-person

730 S Sterling Ave, Suite 306, Tampa, FL 33609

Virtual

Available throughout Florida

Virtual sessions work extremely well for excoriation disorder. Your home environment including the mirror, the bathroom, the specific situations that trigger picking becomes part of the treatment context. Your therapist can guide you through real-time skills in the places where picking happens.

Frequently Asked Questions

They are in the same DSM-5 category Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders but they are not identical. OCD is driven by obsessions followed by specific compulsions. Excoriation disorder is driven more by sensory needs, tension relief, and urges. Some people have both. A proper assessment with a specialist helps identify which is driving the behavior and guides the right treatment approach.

It may be. Picking at scabs, bug bites, or skin that happens repeatedly and is difficult to interrupt, causing distress or skin damage, warrants an evaluation. In children, excoriation disorder is sometimes overlooked because adults assume it will stop on its own. Early treatment leads to significantly better outcomes. We work with children and involve parents directly in the treatment process.

It is never too late. Excoriation disorder that has been present for decades responds to the same treatment as more recent cases though it may take longer to see full results. Many adults who have been picking for most of their lives see dramatic improvement with ComB and HRT. The key is getting specialized help not generic talk therapy.

Mirror picking is one of the most common and hardest-to-interrupt patterns in excoriation disorder. The mirror acts as an environmental trigger and once you are in front of it, the automatic behavior takes over before awareness kicks in.

Minor scars and discoloration often fade significantly once picking stops. More significant scarring may be permanent but a dermatologist can assess your specific situation and discuss options. The most important step is reducing picking, which treatment helps you do. Many people find that once the behavior is under control, their focus on appearance concerns fades significantly as well.

Both are body-focused repetitive behaviors in the same diagnostic family. Trichotillomania involves pulling hair. Excoriation disorder involves picking at skin. They share similar mechanisms urge-driven, tension-relieving, often automatic and respond to similar treatment approaches. Some people have both conditions at the same time. Both are treated at our practice.

You Do Not Have to Keep Hiding. Help Is Here.

Excoriation disorder thrives in shame and secrecy. The longer it goes untreated, the more deeply embedded it becomes. But with the right specialist and the right approach, real change is possible for children, teens, and adults who have been struggling for any length of time.

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