When Washougal graduate Laycee Hyde was in elementary school, 80 percent of her body was covered in scaly, itchy patches of skin — a condition known as psoriasis.
She wore long sleeves to school every day to hide the lesions and endured teasing and questions from her peers.
“It was really hard,” she said. “Kids can be mean.”
Now an 18-year-old, less than two percent of her body is covered with psoriasis and she works as a youth ambassador with the National Psoriasis Foundation to raise awareness of the disease.
She will lead a team in the Walk to Cure Psoriasis in Portland on Sept. 24.
Psoriasis is an auto-immune disease that makes the body produce too many skin cells and makes it difficult to fight off infections.