Tag: hair loss treatment

Can Hair Loss Affect Job Applicants?

Hair loss and job attractiveness. Is there a difference in hiring practices for people that are bald?

In the book ” Do Pretty People Earn More?” written by Kate Lorenz from CareerBuilder.com, it’s stated that ordinary people or those considered “homely” earn up to 20% less than their more attractive counterparts. Essentially this is stating that it pays more to look good.

Polls often show that both men and women feel hair loss creates a disadvantage in business, daily life and romance. Socially, hair loss has been considered a detriment but only recently did it become considered an impediment to career advancement.

Other publications have made mention of the relevance of looking good and career advancement including “Why Beauty Matters” from the American Economic Review and “The Beauty Bounty” from Harvard Magazine. Both essentially state that workers considered to be more attractive receive increased wages of 5-15% more than those with below-average looks.

A study by the Emmid Institute in Munich concluded that men who are balding have a decreased chance of getting a position when compared to men with hair.

These concerns are consistent with a 2006 survey conducted by The International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery.  The ISHRS reported that 77% of adults would be concerned if they were at the beginning of their career and began to experience noticeable hair loss.

There is an association with hair loss, aging and loss of virility, which can result in lack of self-esteem and a negative self image.

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Hair Loss, Heart Health, Is There A Cardiovascular Risk To Balding?

Heart Health and Hair Loss

There has been increased interest and funding in cardiovascular health and there has been correlations shown between androgenic alopecia type hair loss and heart disease. Much more research is being done to better understand the correlation between heart health and losing hair.

Baldness may be more than just a cosmetic indignity: it could be a marker of heart disease risk, especially in men with other risk factors such as high blood pressure or elevated cholesterol. Heart attacks, chest pain due to blocked arteries (called angina), and the need for balloon angioplasty or bypass surgery all are forms of heart disease, the researchers explained.

In men with high cholesterol and severe androgenic alopecia type baldness at the vertex, or crown of the head, heart disease risk was increased nearly threefold compared to men who had high cholesterol but were not bald, says senior author JoAnn E. Manson, MD, Dr PHD.

High blood pressure was associated with an 80% increase in heart disease risk if the men were also bald. Mild and moderate vertex baldness were also associated with an increased risk of heart disease, but to a lesser extent. Frontal baldness — a receding hairline — had little relationship to heart disease. “To our knowledge, this is the first large-scale study showing a relationship between a specific pattern of baldness and heart-disease risk,” Manson says. The researchers, in addition, saw that the men with more severe hair loss developed more heart disease during the 11 years they were watched than men with only mild to moderate hair loss, suggesting a link between the degree of hair loss and heart disease risk.

The biological link between hair loss and heart disease could involve elevated levels of male hormones, says Manson, an endocrinologist and chief of preventive medicine at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. Hair loss research has shown that the scalp has a higher density of male-hormone receptors, and high levels of hormones such as testosterone and dihydrotestosterone (DHT Hair Loss) are associated with an increased risk of hardening of the arteries and blood clotting. Although this study did not include women, Manson says that true male-pattern baldness in women, which is associated with an increase in male hormones, has been linked to an increased risk of high blood pressure, diabetes, and abnormal cholesterol, all of which raise the risk of heart disease. She cautions, however, that this finding has not been well studied.

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