Hair Dye and Relaxer Use among Cisgender Women in Embu and Nakuru Counties, Kenya: Associations with Perceived Risk of Breast Cancer and Other Health Effects

Mixed evidence is observed regarding whether higher levels of perceived risk were associated with lower odds of ever using hair dyes and relaxers and whether the role of environmental health literacy are critical for developing interventions to reduce potentially harmful exposures found in these products.

Fri Jun 28 2024
by Adana A. M. Llanos, Adiba Ashrafi and others
CHAT WITH RESEARCH


QUESTIONS & ANSWERS

Log in to generate
TL;DR
AI KEY POINTS
ABSTRACT
PAPER
Mixed evidence is observed regarding whether higher levels of perceived risk were associated with lower odds of ever using hair dyes and relaxers and whether the role of environmental health literacy are critical for developing interventions to reduce potentially harmful exposures found in these products.


Research is provided by Semantic Scholar and AI-generated text may at times produce inaccurate results.
Information provided on this site does not constitute legal, financial, medical, or any other professional advice.

DATA LICENSING
Search and article data is provided under CC BY-NC or ODC-BY and via The Semantic Scholar Open Data Platform. Read more at Kinney, Rodney Michael et al. “The Semantic Scholar Open Data Platform.” ArXiv abs/2301.10140 (2023): n. pag.