Hair Salons Dallas TX

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Hair Salons. You will find informative articles about Hair Salons, including "Health Advice at the Hair Salon". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Dallas, TX that can help answer your questions about Hair Salons.

Dual Functions Hair Gallery
214-526-6682
4217 Bryant St.
Dallas, TX
Annoited Heads
972-607-5700
9605 Clark Rd, Ste 700
Dallas, TX
Salon Madrid
214.954.7330
6003 Berkshire Lane
Dallas, TX
Paul Mitchell Beauty School
972-669-0494
2389 Midway Rd., #A
Carrollton, TX
Maren Karsen Salon
817.461.8686
484 Lincoln Square
Arlington, TX
Studio 5012
214-747-5012
2700 Swiss Ave
Dallas, TX
Darian Ryan Studio
(469) 879-1505
6465 East Mockingbird Ln. Ste. 8
Dallas, TX
Kaliedescopes Salon
972.266.0885
2100 Virginia Drive Suite C
grand priarie, TX
Delectable Designs by De
214-505-6448
2510 Dalrock road
Rowlett, TX
Ory Bill
(214) 559-4269
3526 CEDAR Springs Rd
Dallas, TX
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Health Advice at the Hair Salon

In some communities, particularly where many African-Americans live, the local salon or barber shop is a cultural institution. Men and women alike visit these social hubs on a regular basis not only to get their hair done but to connect with friends and neighbors in a familiar, comforting environment where they can talk, share, vent, and just be themselves. But over the last few years, some hair salons and barbers have been dispensing more than just trims and extensions—they've been giving out health advice, too.

Realizing that for many African-Americans, the shop where they get their hair done is a place of vital importance and trust, health educators in a number of cities have been training salon and barber shop proprietors to offer health advice and screenings to customers. While some African-American men and women shy away from doctor visits—whether because of financial issues or because of an ingrained distrust of the medical profession—they aren't likely to scoff at gently delivered advice on prostate-cancer screenings or a free blood-pressure test while in the barber's chair. Nor are they likely, while having extensions put in, to ignore an earnest appeal from their stylist to get a mammogram as soon as possible. Some customers, if they're found to have high blood pressure, are even promised a free haircut if they go to a doctor and get a prescription for hypertension medication. Occasionally a customer with alarmingly high blood pressure is sent straight to the emergency room.

Why is the medical field targeting the black population with this grassroots salon-based  initiative? African-American men suffer disproportionately from high blood pressure and prostate cancer, according to the American Heart Association. Uncontrolled hypertension can lead to stroke or heart disease, which cause up to one-fourth of all deaths among black Americans. African-American women also are at higher risk of heart disease than any other ethnic group,...

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