Kim Kardashian West Gets Refreshingly Real About Her Psoriasis

"Why cover it?"
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Matt Crossick/Matt Crossick
Kim Kardashian West was diagnosed with psoriasis, a chronic skin condition, in 2010.

After six years of living with psoriasis, a chronic skin condition, Kim Kardashian West said she’s done hiding her skin patches.

“I’ve been pretty open about my struggles with it,” West said in a post on her app Wednesday. “I have that one patch on my right leg that is the most visible. I don’t even really try to cover it that much anymore.” 

Psoriasis is a chronic condition where skin cells build up rapidly and form a thick, flakey patches on the skin’s surface that can be itchy or even painful, according to the Mayo Clinic. No one knows exactly what causes psoriasis, but some think it’s related to an immune system problem in which overactive T cells attack healthy cells by mistake. 

Psoriasis affects approximately 2 percent of the U.S. population, with about 150,000 new cases diagnosed every year, according to the Cleveland Clinic.

Risk factors for developing psoriasis include stress, obesity, smoking and certain viral and bacterial infections. West, who was diagnosed with it in 2010, has another common risk factor: family history. Her mother, Kris Jenner, also has the condition.

There’s no cure for psoriasis, but topical treatments including nonprescription cortisone cream and exposing the skin to small amounts of natural sunlight can help ease psoriasis’ symptoms. 

For some people who suffer from psoriasis it can help to identify and avoid their own psoriasis triggers, which can include factors like infections, scrapes or cuts, sunburn, stress, cold weather, smoking, heavy drinking and certain medications. 

For West, living her life in the spotlight is, surprisingly, a bit of a blessing when it comes to having psoriasis. “Sometimes I just feel like it’s my big flaw and everyone knows about it, so why cover it?” West asked. 

West isn’t the only one who feels this way. According to a 2009 National Psoriasis Foundation survey, 73 percent of survey respondents with psoriasis said they felt self-conscious about having the disease, and 67 percent of women responded that psoriasis affected their overall emotional well-being. 

In that sense, West’s attitude might be helpful to any fans who share the condition. She isn’t pretending to love her psoriasis, but she’s on the red carpet baring her skin for the world to see ― and she’s evolving. 

“After this many years, I’ve really learned to live with it.”

Before You Go

Suffering The Silence: Portraits Of Chronic Illness
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(02 of11)
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"You learn who your friends are. I went to arthritis camp when I was a kid. Telling my friends I went to arthritis camp, they would giggle and I would say, no, I’m serious. There are a lot of issues that don’t get acknowledged in the disability community. There’s a lack of intersectionality shown on foundation websites and it was kind of depressing to the point that I can’t say I became a militant activist but I became angry enough to be more vocal about it." -Chiara, rheumatoid arthritis, fibromyalgia, scoliosis (via sufferingthesilence.com)

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"Ninety percent of people with Hemophilia contracted HIV and/or Hepatitis-C in the late '80s, early '90s because of the blood contamination crisis that is one of the most unfortunate events in American health history. On the converse, today we have the medicine to live very normal lives. I’m a part of the first fully healthy generation of people with hemophilia and yet 80 percent of the world still doesn’t have access to the medicine or care that we do, that allows someone like me to live to see beyond the age of 3 or 4. The history is dark and the people who lived through it still feel the effects of that. It’s a very conflicted community. It’s strange to look and feel normal but be a part of something that is very specifically complicated." -Patrick, hemophilia (via sufferingthesilence.com)

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"Something simple like breathing is a hard thing for people living with asthma. So if your goal is 'today I want to breathe,' that is a big feat because even walking down the stairs, the subways in New York, the pollen, smog, everything gets in the way of breathing. I heard this quote before that said 'a life as an asthmatic is like a fish with no water' and it’s very, very true." -Reisha, asthma (via sufferingthesilence.com)

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