The Freeman

Black barbershop­s help lower blood pressure

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MIAMI — Black barbershop­s are known as places to gather, socialize and get a haircut. But a study Monday said they can also help encourage men to get their high blood pressure under control.

When a trained pharmacist met men regularly at their local Los Angeles barbershop, clients were able to significan­tly lower their blood pressure, said the findings released at the American College of Cardiology conference in Orlando, Florida.

If employed on a broad scale, the approach could make major inroads in treating African-American men, a population that is more likely than other races to have high blood pressure – a leading risk factor for heart disease and stroke – and less likely to be in a doctor's care, researcher­s said.

"By bringing state-ofthe-art medicine directly to the people who need it on their home turf, in this case in a barbershop, and making it both convenient and rigorous, blood pressure can be controlled just as well in African-American men as in other groups," said lead author Ronald Victor, associate director of the Smidt Heart Institute at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

"If this model was scaled up and sustained, millions of lives could be saved, and many heart attacks and strokes could be prevented."

For the study, 319 men were recruited at 52 Los Angeles County barbershop­s.

All the men had high blood pressure, defined as a systolic blood pressure over 140 mm Hg based on multiple measuremen­ts taken on two different days.

Their ages ranged from 35 to 71. They tended to be long-time regulars at their barbershop­s and went about twice a month for a haircut.

Some men were randomly assigned to meet with a trained pharmacist at each barbershop visit. The rest were given advice and encouragem­ent on healthy lifestyle choices from their barber, who urged them to see a doctor for follow up.

Those who met with the pharmacist monthly in their barbershop lowered their systolic blood pressure by 21 mm Hg more, on average, compared with the other men, said the report published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

 ?? FRANCE PRESSE
AGENCE ?? In this file photo, Nurney Mason (center) of Washington, DC, sits alongside customers in his son's barbershop at Mason's Hair Gallery, a barbershop and hair salon, in Washington,DC. Black barbershop­s are known as places to gather, socialize and get a...
FRANCE PRESSE AGENCE In this file photo, Nurney Mason (center) of Washington, DC, sits alongside customers in his son's barbershop at Mason's Hair Gallery, a barbershop and hair salon, in Washington,DC. Black barbershop­s are known as places to gather, socialize and get a...

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