Corns and Calluses
Try This First
Other Wise Ways
Get them wet. To keep your feet soft, try this natural remedy. Buy a foot soak containing the herb calendula, which is available in many health food stores or drugstores. Following package directions, mix the calendula with water and give your feet a good long soak. This herbal soak, done once a week or so, will loosen up dead skin and help new skin cells grow, says James J. Berryhill, Ph.D., naturopathic doctor in Decator, Georgia.
Use padding. On that pharmacy rack that offers dozens of foot-care supplies, you’ll find protective pads for your feet. The package directions will tell you what to do. Every morning before you put on your shoes, put the pads around those areas where you tend to form corns or calluses, says Ernest Levi, D.P.M., podiatrist in private practice in New York City.
Avoid the medicated products. The word “medicated” may seem like a guarantee that your foot won’t get infected if you use protective foot pads carrying that label. But in fact, the acids contained in those medicated pads can actually irritate the skin of older people and possibly lead to infection, according to Dr. Levi. Choose the unmedicated kind instead, he advises.