Diaper cream that eliminates the cause of diaper rash
OlaCare® neutralizes proteases in baby's stool, which are the cause of irritation.*
Now you know!
OlaCare® neutralizes proteases in baby's stool, which are the cause of irritation.*
Now you know!
Diaper rash doesn't just happen.
It's caused by proteases — enzymes in stool that irritate the delicate skin under the diaper.
OlaCare® cream knows how to solve this:
it neutralizes proteases and protects the skin before irritation appears.*
And additionally contains panthenol, which promotes healing and skin regeneration.
Daily use means peace of mind for you and comfort for your baby.
OlaCare® cream eliminates the cause — without waiting for the consequences to appear.
OlaCare® cream is more than just protection from irritation. It's an innovative cream that eliminates the cause of diaper rash, instead of just treating symptoms.
The cause is proteases (enzymes) that remain in the baby's stool. Their aggressive action is much stronger in the first year of life, when the skin is still very vulnerable.*
That's why OlaCare® cream is based on Solanum tuberosum cell extract, a patented natural ingredient that works as a protease inhibitor.*
This means the cream:
OlaCare® cream is an innovative approach to care: proactive, scientifically proven* and naturally caring.
Now you know and can protect!
To protect your baby's delicate skin from diaper rash, use OlaCare® cream regularly — every time you change the diaper. Such daily care provides maximum protection and peace of mind for you and your child.
If redness or rash appears, this may be a signal that the skin has been damaged by enzymes — proteases. OlaCare® cream contains a component that neutralizes them*, as well as panthenol for soothing and faster healing.
When your usual cream or powder doesn't work, it's worth trying a new remedy that acts on the cause — aggressive proteases. OlaCare® cream was created specifically for this. Apply it and see its effectiveness.
* Ruseler‐van Embden, J. G., Van Lieshout, L. M., Smits, S. A., Van Kessel, I., & Laman, J. D. (2004). Potato tuber proteins efficiently inhibit human faecal proteolytic activity: Implications for treatment of peri‐anal dermatitis. European Journal of Clinical Investigation, 34(4), 303–311.
** Patent WO 2016/165783, referring to Princeton consumer research study No.: EURRPI