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Volume 31, Issue 6: Decemberl, 2004
Abstract
Observational Study in Ten Beauty Salons: Results
Informing Development of the North Carolina BEAUTY and Health
Project
Felicia M. Solomon, MPH, Laura A. Linnan, ScD, CHES, Yvonne
Wasilewski, PhD, MPH, Ann Marie Lee, MPH, CHES, Mira L. Katz,
PhD, MPH, Jingzhen Yang, MPH
Researchers from the North Carolina BEAUTY and Health Project
conducted an observational study in 10 North Carolina beauty
salons to gain insight into naturally occurring conversations
between cosmetologists and customers, and to assess features
of the salon environment that might be used to inform the
development of salon-based health promotion interventions.
Results revealed that the social environment of a salon is
a place where cosmetologists and customers talk openly about
many subjects, including health. Information, advice, appraisal,
humor, and empathy are typically shared in these health conversations.
Several features of the physical environment of the salon
may be mobilized to support health—access to healthy
foods, snacks, and beverages; smoking restrictions; and availability
of print or video materials, signs, or displays that include
healthy messages. Implications for planning salon-based health
promotion interventions—including the training of licensed
cosmetologists to deliver health messages—are discussed
in light of these findings.
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