Doola Learn / Pregnancy skincare and product safety
Pregnancy skincare and product safety articles
Source-cited guides for skincare ingredients, beauty products, salon questions, supplements, and product labels that parents often want to check during pregnancy.
Start here
Begin with answer-first articles that separate common patterns from warning signs.
Pregnancy Safe Sunscreen: Mineral, Chemical, and Tinted SPF Choices
Pregnancy safe sunscreen choices: mineral vs chemical SPF, tinted sunscreen for melasma, label checks, and when to scan ingredients.
Salicylic Acid During Pregnancy: Topical Use, Peels, and Source Check
Looking for MotherToBaby-style salicylic acid pregnancy guidance? Check topical strength, rinse-off vs leave-on format, peels, body area, and source-backed next steps.
Magnesium During Pregnancy: Safety, Supplements, and Label Checks
Magnesium during pregnancy can mean food, prenatal vitamins, powders, gummies, or sleep/cramp supplements. Check safety cues on the label.
Pregnancy Acne Treatment: What Helps, What to Avoid, and What to Check
Pregnancy acne treatment depends on the ingredient and product type. Learn what may help, what to avoid, and when to check the label.
Retinol During Pregnancy: Safety, Risks, and Safer Swaps
Retinol during pregnancy is generally avoided. Learn ingredient names, accidental use, safer swaps, and when to ask.
PDRN Skincare During Pregnancy: Safe or Skip?
PDRN skincare during pregnancy has limited safety data. Learn how topical products differ from procedures, what to check, and when to ask.
Accidentally Used Retinol While Pregnant: Risk and What to Do
A calm guide to one-off retinol or retinoid skincare exposure in pregnancy, what usually matters, and when to ask your clinician.
Accidentally Used Salicylic Acid While Pregnant: Safety and What to Do
What to do after using a salicylic acid cleanser, serum, peel, or acne product during pregnancy, with source-cited next steps.
Hair Dye During Pregnancy: What Changes the Safety Answer
Hair dye during pregnancy is usually low risk when used as directed. Learn ventilation, scalp contact, patch tests, and work exposure.
Doola Learn is educational and source-cited. It helps readers interpret public-health guidance and organize next questions. It does not diagnose illness or replace care from a clinician.