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Alopecia is No Laughing Matter for Millions of Black American Women

The Conversation by The Conversation
April 3, 2024
in Trends
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Alopecia is No Laughing Matter for Millions of Black American Women

What is alopecia? It’s no laughing matter for millions of Black American women

Black American women
Black American women
Jada Pinkett Smith has spoken about her struggles with hair loss.
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

Danita Peoples, Wayne State University

The Oscar slap that overshadowed the Academy Awards ceremony was sparked by a joke about Jada Pinkett Smith’s lack of hair – with husband Will Smith objecting violently to comedian Chris Rock mocking the actress’s shaved head.

Away from the recriminations over what could be perceived as a mean-spirited jibe and a disproportionate response, many people will sympathize with Pinkett Smith. As millions of women in the U.S. will attest, hair loss is no laughing matter.

The Conversation asked dermatologist Danita Peoples of Wayne State University’s School of Medicine about alopecia and why certain forms of it can disproportionately affect Black women.

1. What is alopecia?

Alopecia is a medical word that refers to hair loss generally. And there are descriptors added which can refer to where the hair loss is occurring, or to the cause of it. Traction alopecia, for example, is hair loss from trauma or chronic inflammatory changes to the hair follicles.

2. What causes alopecia?

Traction alopecia happens when there is trauma to the scalp, where the hair is being pulled or rubbed on a regular basis, causing inflammation around the hair follicles. This can lead to hair loss or thinning.

Alopecia areata describes hair loss to a particular area. It has different levels of severity, so there might be just a coin-sized area of hair loss on the scalp, or it could affect large areas. It can occur any place on the body.

Or it might result in complete hair loss on the scalp, alopecia totalis. Some people lose eyebrows or see a thinning of their eyelashes.

People can even have alopecia universalis, which is a loss of hair on the entire body.

Alopecia areata is considered an “immune-mediated” type of hair loss. The immune system is attacking the hair follicles. It has to do with T cells, the important white blood cells in the immune system.

And then other autoimmune disorders can have alopecia associated with them. This is the form of alopecia that Jada Pinkett Smith has said she has.

Lupus is an autoimmune disorder that can lead to hair loss. One type is systemic lupus erythematosus. Another type, discoid lupus erythematosus, primarily affects the skin and can cause hair loss with scarring on the scalp.

Thyroid abnormalities can be related to hair loss as well. In fact, when patients come to me with hair loss, the first test that I may order is a thyroid study.

3. Who does it affect?

Anyone can get alopecia. Alopecia areata can show up at any age, from children to adults, and both men and women. But it’s more likely to affect African Americans than white or Asian Americans. About 1 million people in the U.S. have alopecia areata.

Traction alopecia can affect people in certain professions, like ballerinas, who wear their hair up in buns all the time. The pressure and friction from sports headgear, like helmets or baseball caps, can also cause hair loss. And in some parts of northern Europe, where it is common for people to pull their hair back tight on a regular basis, there are higher rates of traction alopecia. Traction alopecia affects one-third of women of African descent, making it the most common type of alopecia affecting Black women.

4. Why is traction alopecia so common among Black women?

That is due to certain hair styling practices that Black women use on their hair – wearing tight weaves or extensions, straightening with heat, that sort of thing. Hair is a big deal among African American women in a way that it isn’t for others. When I was growing up, my older relatives told us girls that our hair was our “crowning glory.” And they made a big deal about us keeping our hair looking stylish and well groomed, and that usually meant straightening it.

But I believe there’s less pressure than there used to be for Black women to keep our hair straightened, in the workplace or elsewhere.

5. How is alopecia treated?

It depends on the cause. There are injected or topical corticosteroids for alopecia areata. If it’s due to a nutritional deficiency, like iron or protein, obviously you simply need to correct the deficiencies with supplements or by changing the diet. When it is caused by traction or discoid lupus, if you don’t treat the inflammation on the scalp soon enough, the hair loss can become permanent.

[Over 150,000 readers rely on The Conversation’s newsletters to understand the world. Sign up today.]

When it comes to traction, though, it’s much more about eliminating the practices that cause the problem in the first place. What’s happening now is more people are aware of the downsides of chemical or heat applications to straighten the hair and are using those damaging processes less.

One thing that may help is the CROWN Act, legislation introduced last year, which the U.S. House passed on March 18, 2022. That would make it illegal to discriminate against people wearing natural styles, such as afros and braids, so I am hopeful that it will contribute to a lot less traction alopecia in the future.

Danita Peoples, Clinical Associate Professor of Dermatology, Wayne State University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Videos

summary

This episode explores deceptive pricing strategies in the GLP-1 medication market, highlighting how healthcare consumerism influences patient decisions and how to recognize and protect against misleading practices.

 key  topics

Deceptive pricing strategies in healthcare
The role of brand perception and pricing manipulation
The concept of drip pricing and hidden costs
The rise of healthcare consumerism and patient agency
Strategies for patients to identify and avoid deceptive practices

Chapters

00:00 The Evolution of the GLP-1 Telemedicine Market
01:12 How Pricing Is Obscured and Perceived Discounts Are Created
02:11 TrumpRx: Coupon Aggregator or Discount Store?
03:12 Why Price Deception Thrives in Healthcare
04:12 The Membership Fee Illusion and Hidden Costs
05:10 Brand Recognition and Drip Pricing Strategies
06:17 The Impact of Brand and Anchor Pricing on Perceived Value
07:16 The Role of Price Drip Strategies in Healthcare Pricing
08:15 The Rise of Healthcare Consumerism and Patient Agency
09:14 How to Protect Yourself from Deceptive Pricing Practices
10:09 Conclusion: Empowering Patients in a Complex Pricing Landscape
Unmasking Deceptive Pricing in Healthcare: What Patients Need to Know
YouTube Video zZgo1nLZVrY
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Policy Shift in Peptide Regulation

Clinical Reads

GLP-1 Drugs Have Moved Past Weight Loss. Medicine Has Not Fully Caught Up.

Glucagon-Like Peptide–Based Therapies and Longevity: Clinical Implications from Emerging Evidence

by Daily Remedy
March 1, 2026
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Glucagon-like peptide–based therapies are increasingly used for weight management and glycemic control, but their potential impact on long-term survival remains uncertain. The clinical question addressed in this report is whether treatment with glucagon-like peptide receptor agonists is associated with reductions in all-cause mortality and age-related morbidity beyond their established metabolic effects. This question matters because these agents are now prescribed across broad patient populations, including individuals without diabetes, and long-term exposure may influence cardiovascular, oncologic, and neurodegenerative outcomes. Understanding whether...

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