Study Suggests Hairstylists Can Help Identify Senior
Citizens in Need of Health Services
‘Hair stylists are in a great position to notice
when their older clients are starting to suffer from depression,
dementia, or self-neglect’
By Jeff Grabmeier
Sept. 8, 2009 - Hairstylists may have a unique
opportunity to help steer their elderly clients to needed health
services, according to a small, exploratory study. More than 80 percent
of 40 Columbus-area stylists surveyed said that older clients often or
always shared their problems during appointments.
“Hair stylists are in a great position to notice
when their older clients are starting to suffer from depression,
dementia, or self-neglect,” said
Keith Anderson, co-author of the study and assistant professor of
social work at Ohio State University.
“While not expecting too much beyond the scope of
their jobs, we may be able to help stylists direct elderly people in
trouble to community services.”
Anderson conducted the study with Andrea Cimbal and
Jeffrey Maile, graduate students in social work at Ohio State. Their
results appear in the current issue of the
Journal of Applied Gerontology.
Anderson said he decided to do the study after
reading sometimes-joking references in the popular press to “salon
therapy,” in which clients discussed their relationship, family and
health problems to their stylists, who act as sympathetic ears and
sometimes as pseudo-therapists.
“I wondered if stylists really did have these close
relationships with their clients,” Anderson said.
“And if they did, I thought there might be
opportunities to use these relationships to help older adults.”
Anderson focused on older adults in this study
because of his research interest in gerontology.
“It seems like
a perfect setup – stylists have access to older adults who may
need someone to point them to the help they need. But at least
this sample of stylists suggests they don’t know what services
are out there to help these folks,” he said.
The study included 40 stylists from the Columbus
area who responded to a mail survey. The participants reported that, on
average, about one-third of their clients were 60 years old or older.
Anderson said the results suggest that most
stylists do develop close long-term relationships with their older
clients.
About 85 percent of stylists described their
relationships with older clients as “close” or “very close.” About 72
percent said their role was like one of “family” to some of their older
customers.
“This is one reason why I think hair stylists are
especially suited to seeing problems in their customers,” Anderson said.
“Their older clients may sit in a chair for an hour
or longer while they’re having their hair done, and this may happen once
or twice a month. So stylists are in a good position to recognize when
things change with a client, and when they may need help.”
Health and family problems are the issues most
often brought up by elderly customers – more than three-quarters of
stylists have heard such complaints, the survey revealed. And more than
a third of stylists said clients have discussed problems with depression
or anxiety.
The vast majority of stylists said their response
to hearing their clients’ problems is to offer sympathy and support, and
to try to cheer them up.
But fewer than half said they have given advice,
and only about one-quarter have tried to get the client to speak to
someone who can help them.
That’s not because they are not willing to help,
Anderson said. About two-thirds said they are willing to refer an older
client to appropriate services.
But the problem, Anderson said, is that more than
half – 52 percent -- said they were not familiar with community services
that may be helpful to older adults.
“It seems like a perfect setup – stylists have
access to older adults who may need someone to point them to the help
they need. But at least this sample of stylists suggests they don’t
know what services are out there to help these folks,” he said.
But could hairstylists identify older clients who
needed professional help?
At least the stylists surveyed thought they could.
The researchers asked participants to rate on a scale of 1 to 10 (with
10 being the highest) their ability to recognize symptoms of depression,
dementia and neglect in their older clients. In all three cases,
stylists rated their ability between 7.6 and 7.8.
Anderson said the question then becomes how to get
stylists more involved in helping their older clients. He noted that
there’s already a national domestic violence awareness program called
“Cut It Out” that recruits hair stylists to recognize indicators of
domestic violence and get victims help. Something similar could be done
to assist older adults with mental health and related problems.
Anderson said he recognizes that stylists have a
job to do, and can’t devote too much of their time and education to
issues unrelated to hair styling.
Only 45 percent of the stylists surveyed said they
were interested in receiving mental health training.
But stylists could play an important role by even
just learning about local community services and offering brochures to
older adults that have information on how to access the help they need.
“We can’t expect them to do everything, but our
results suggest that most stylists care about their clients and would be
willing to help them,” he said.
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