Expert declares end to ‘war on pubic hair’

The hair removal market was estimated to be worth $2.1bn in the US in 2011.

The hair removal market was estimated to be worth $2.1bn in the US in 2011.

Published Aug 10, 2012

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London - A doctor has launched an appeal to reverse one of the fashion trends of the last decade, seen in the explosion of beauty salons offering bikini waxing, laser hair removal and “vajazzling”- jewelled decoration of the genitals.

Emily Gibson, a family physician and head of a student health centre, called for an end to the “war on pubic hair” claiming it is increasing the risk of infection and of sexually transmitted diseases amongst young people.

“The amount of time, energy, money and emotion both genders spend on abolishing hair from their genitals is astronomical,” she says.

The hair removal market was estimated to be worth $2.1bn in the US in 2011 and is on a similar scale in the UK and as director of the health centre at Western University in Washington State, US, she has seen the consequences.

“Pubic hair removal naturally irritates and inflames the hair follicles, leaving microscopic open wounds. Frequent hair removal is necessary to stay smooth, causing regular irritation of the shaved or waxed area. When that is combined with the warm, moist environment of the genitals, it becomes a happy culture media for some of the nastiest bacterial pathogens,” she writes on the respected US medical website Kevin MD.com.

Surgeons used to insist on shaving the area of the body where an operation was to be performed in the misguided belief that it reduced surgical site infections. Now official advice is to leave hair alone, unless it interferes with the operation, and where removal is necessary to use electric clippers.

Dr Gibson says that whatever method is used - razor blades, electric shavers, tweezers, waxing, depilatories, electrolysis - “hair...always grows back and eventually wins.”

In her practice it is not unusual to find patients with boils and abscesses on their genitals from shaving as well as cellulitis. Herpes is also an increased risk “due to the microscopic wounds being exposed to virus carried by mouth or genitals. It follows that there may be vulnerability to spread of other sexually transmitted diseases as well,” she says. “It is time to declare a truce in the war on pubic hair and allow it to stay right where it belongs.”

Dr Bav Shergill, Consultant Dermatologist at Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals Trust, said: “'Bare down there' is a fashion amongst some groups right now and may pass once people get fed up with the high level of maintenance.” - The Independent

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