News & Media

Why Your Usual Routine Stops Working

Written by Dr. Christine Gilroy | Jul 08, 2026

 

Spotlight 2 — When Your Summer Skin Routine Falls Apart

Every summer, a familiar pattern plays out: the routine that managed psoriasis or eczema through spring starts to feel less effective — not because the treatment suddenly stopped working, but because summer fundamentally changes the environment your skin lives in. Higher temperatures, more time outdoors, and frequent exposure to water and sun all shift the conditions around an already sensitive skin barrier.

Why it matters: Many standard topical treatments are designed to manage symptoms at the skin’s surface, and they have real, predictable limits. Summer pushes against those limits on multiple fronts at once. Sweat can dilute or wash treatments away. Heat intensifies inflammation and itching. Travel, social events, and changing schedules make it harder to apply therapies at the same time, in the same way, every day. Over a few weeks, that loss of consistency can translate into more flares and less control.

Chlorine from pools, salt water, sunscreen, and insect repellent all add extra load to a barrier already challenged by heat and humidity. Cleansing more often to remove these exposures can further dry or irritate the skin. At the same time, many people understandably prioritize flexibility in summer — late nights, weekend trips, and outdoor activities often displace treatment time. The result is a slow drift away from the regimen that kept symptoms stable in cooler months.

When patients tell me their routine ‘stopped working’ in July, I rarely think the treatment failed — I think summer happened. The triggers stacked up, the schedule slipped, and the treatment hit the edge of what it can do on its own. That’s when it’s worth asking whether there’s a better tool for the job.

  • If summer is consistently when your routine breaks down, that pattern is clinically meaningful. It may indicate you are managing disease activity at the upper limit of what your current approach can deliver.

  • Narrowband UVB therapy targets the immune activity driving flares beneath the skin’s surface, addressing the underlying inflammation rather than only the visible symptoms on top.

  • The FDA-cleared, at-home Zerigo Health device is designed to fit into real life — including summer. App-connected dosing, flexible scheduling, and guidance from the Zerigo ecosystem support consistent, precise treatment that integrates into changing routines instead of competing with them.