MOLE MAPPING FOR FAMILIES: HOW TO MONITOR YOUR KIDS’ SKIN SAFELY
KEEPING TRACK OF CHANGES FROM DAY ONE
START WITH A BASELINE BODY MAP BEFORE AGE TWO
Use a soft measuring tape and a washable marker to trace every mole on a clear plastic sheet laid over your child’s skin Lung Cancer. Snap a photo of each marked sheet with a ruler in frame for scale—this becomes your zero-point reference for future comparisons.
SCHEDULE YOUR FIRST DERM VISIT BY THEIR FIRST BIRTHDAY
Book a pediatric dermatologist who uses a digital dermatoscope with polarized light; ask for a full-body 30-megapixel image set stored in a HIPAA-compliant cloud folder you can access from your phone.
LABEL EVERY MOLE WITH A WATERPROOF STICKER CODE
Cut small circles from white adhesive bandage material, write a unique two-letter code (e.g., LA for left arm), and place one next to each mole before photographing. Peel them off after the session to avoid skin irritation.
CREATE A DEDICATED GOOGLE PHOTOS ALBUM WITH FACE RECOGNITION OFF
Upload every baseline image to a private album named “[Child’s Name] Mole Map 2024,” disable facial recognition in settings, and set the album to auto-delete after five years unless you manually extend it.
HOME MONITORING THAT ACTUALLY WORKS
USE A $20 USB DERMATOSCOPE FOR WEEKLY SPOT CHECKS
Plug a Firefly DE300 into your tablet, set the light to cross-polarized mode, and capture 10× magnified images of each coded mole every Sunday night while your child watches a favorite show.
SET A RECURRING SUNDAY NIGHT ALARM LABELED “MOLE CHECK”
Configure your phone alarm for 7:30 p.m. with a custom vibration pattern (three short buzzes) so you remember to scan before bath time when skin is clean and dry.
TEACH YOUR CHILD TO SAY “STOP” IF THE LIGHT FEELS HOT
Practice a quick “hot-cold” game with the dermatoscope so your child knows to immediately tell you if the LED feels warm against their skin—prevents accidental burns on sensitive areas.
USE A FREE APP THAT OVERLAYS OLD AND NEW IMAGES
Download MoleMapper (iOS) or SkinVision (Android), import your baseline photos, and use the side-by-side slider tool to compare mole size, shape, and color every four weeks.
KEEP A PAPER LOG NEXT TO THE BATHROOM SINK
Hang a waterproof notepad with columns for date, mole code, size in millimeters, and notes; jot observations while your child brushes teeth to catch subtle changes between photo sessions.
WHEN TO ESCALATE AND WHAT TO ASK THE DERM
FLAG ANY MOLE THAT GROWS FASTER THAN 1 MM PER MONTH
Measure with a digital caliper; if a mole’s diameter increases by more than 1 mm in four weeks, book a derm appointment within seven days—don’t wait for the next scheduled check.
ASK FOR A “CHANGE REPORT” AT EVERY VISIT
Request a printed side-by-side comparison of the current dermatoscope images versus the baseline, highlighting any mole that has shifted in asymmetry, border, color, diameter, or elevation (ABCDE).
BRING A PRINTED PHOTO OF ANY MOLE THAT ITCHES OR BLEEDS
Take a close-up shot with your phone, print it at a drugstore, and hand it to the dermatologist—this ensures they examine the exact spot without relying on your child’s verbal description.
SCHEDULE CHECK-UPS RIGHT AFTER SCHOOL BREAKS
Book appointments for early January and late June to follow up on any sun exposure from winter ski trips or summer camp; derms can detect UV-induced changes before they become visible to the naked eye.
REQUEST A COPY OF THE RAW DERMATOSCOPE FILES
Ask the clinic to export the original .DNG or .TIFF files to a USB drive you keep in your safe; these uncompressed images preserve detail for future AI analysis or second opinions.
