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First published online May 26, 2022

And It’ll Come Back Real Baby Fine: Black Women’s Experiences With Hair Loss and Regrowth After Chemotherapy for Breast Cancer Treatment

Abstract

In this study, I use a modified grounded theory, intersectional approach to understand the wellness-illness experience for black women experiencing breast cancer. I use interviews from 38 breast cancer survivors from Nashville, Durham-Chapel Hill, and Atlanta conducted between 2014 and 2015 to explore variations in perceptions of hair loss and regrowth. Universally, hair loss from chemotherapy treatments is a stressful experience, which cause women to question their health and femininity. Hair loss is a crisis in which women feel less beautiful and more sick. Interesting patterns steeped in race and beauty emerged from women’s narratives as they experienced hair regrowth. Black women’s stories of hair loss associated with chemotherapy are influenced by values associated racialized ideologies about beauty. Good, baby fine, soft and thick, loosely curled, straight, wavy, and beautiful are just some of the words many women chose to describe their chemically altered hair. The dialogue around hair regrowth and texture is problematic given Eurocentric standards of feminine beauty, notions that coincide the long ties between chemicals and hair straightening in the black community.

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Published In

Article first published online: May 26, 2022
Issue published: June 2022

Keywords

  1. adaptation, coping, enduring
  2. breast cancer
  3. cancer
  4. culture, cultural competence
  5. embodiment, bodily experiences
  6. gender
  7. healing
  8. marginalized or vulnerable populations
  9. minorities
  10. religion, spirituality
  11. stress, distress
  12. survivorship
  13. women’s health
  14. black or African American women

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© The Author(s) 2022.
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PubMed: 35616447

Authors

Affiliations

Kanetha B. Wilson
Department of Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Decatur, GA, USA

Notes

Kanetha B. Wilson, Department of Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, 1211 Medical Center Drive, Nashville, TN 37232, USA. Email: [email protected]

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