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Oct 03
Study Shows Baldness Can Be a Business Advantage
Men with shaved heads are perceived to be more masculine, dominant and, in some cases, to have greater leadership potential than those with longer locks or with thinning hair, according to a recent study out of the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.

That may explain why the power-buzz look has caught on among business leaders in recent years. Venture capitalist and Netscape founder Marc Andreessen, 41 years old, DreamWorks Animation SKG Chief Executive Jeffrey Katzenberg, 61, and Amazon.com Inc. CEO Jeffrey Bezos, 48, all sport some variant of the close-cropped look.

Some executives say the style makes them appear younger or at least, makes their age less evident and gives them more confidence than a comb-over or monk-like pate.

"I'm not saying that shaving your head makes you successful, but it starts the conversation that you've done something active," says tech entrepreneur and writer Seth Godin, 52, who has embraced the bare look for two decades. "These are people who decide to own what they have, as opposed to trying to pretend to be something else."

Wharton management lecturer Albert Mannes conducted three experiments to test peoples' perceptions of men with shaved heads. In one of the experiments, he showed 344 subjects photos of the same men in two versions: one showing the man with hair and the other showing him with his hair digitally removed, so his head appears shaved.

In all three tests, the subjects reported finding the men with shaved heads as more dominant than their hirsute counterparts. In one test, men with shorn heads were even perceived as an inch taller and about 13% stronger than those with fuller manes. The paper, "Shorn Scalps and Perceptions of Male Dominance," was published online, and will be included in a coming issue of journal Social Psychological and Personality Science.

The study found that men with thinning hair were viewed as the least attractive and powerful of the bunch, a finding that tracks with other studies showing that people perceive men with typical male-pattern baldness which affects roughly 35 million Americans as older and less attractive. For those men, the solution could be as cheap and simple as a shave.

According to Wharton's Dr. Mannes who says he was inspired to conduct the research after noticing that people treated him more deferentially when he shaved off his own thinning hair head shavers may seem powerful because the look is associated with hypermasculine images, such as the military, professional athletes and Hollywood action heroes like Bruce Willis. (Male-pattern baldness, by contrast, conjures images of "Seinfeld" character George Costanza.)

New York image consultant Julie Rath advises her clients to get closely cropped when they start thinning up top. "There's something really strong, powerful and confident about laying it all bare," she says, describing the thinning or combed-over look as "kind of shlumpy."

The look is catching on. A 2010 study from razor maker Gillette, a unit of Procter & Gamble Co., found that 13% of respondents said they shaved their heads, citing reasons as varied as fashion, sports and already thinning hair, according to a company spokesman. HeadBlade Inc., which sells head-shaving accessories, says revenues have grown 30% a year in the past decade.

Shaving his head gave 60-year-old Stephen Carley, CEO of restaurant chain Red Robin Gourmet Burgers Inc., a confidence boost when he was working among 20-somethings at tech start-ups in the 1990s. With his thinning hair shorn, "I didn't feel like the grandfather in the office anymore." He adds that the look gave him "the impression that it was much harder to figure out how old I was."

Not everyone needs a buzz. Rick Devine, 55, the CEO of Devine Capital Partners, a Redwood City, Calif., executive-recruitment firm that specializes in the tech industry, advises executive candidates tempted by their clippers to keep their hair closely cropped, rather than completely shaved. "It is way too much image risk," he says. "The best thing you can do in a business meeting is to make your look not an issue."

The cue-ball style can strike some as menacing, so Mr. Carley makes an extra effort to appear friendly and accessible when meeting people for the first time or "at least as nonthreatening as a 6-foot-1-inch bald guy can be," he says.

Some consolation for male-pattern-baldness sufferers: Looking older can be helpful in the workplace. Just as older silverback gorillas are "typically the powerful actors in their social groups" in the wild, so it goes in the office, where a bald head may "signal who is in charge and potentially dangerous," says Caroline Keating, a Colgate University social psychologist who studies dominance.

Other physical features that signal dominance include narrow eyes and lips, as well as broad faces and square jaws. For women, the equation is trickier. Dominant features may be less helpful at work than youthful, feminine features, which are deemed more attractive, Ms. Keating says.

A bare scalp "is nature's way of telling the rest of the world that you are a survivor," adds Michael Cunningham, a professor at the University of Louisville, who has studied social perceptions of baldness. He adds that the deliberate shaved-head look conveys aggressiveness, competitiveness and shows "willingness to stand against social norms."

Bald quickly became a big part of Mr. Godin's brand. The entrepreneur says his pate helps him stand out at conferences and meetings. Now chief executive of the website Squidoo, he continues to use the image of his bald head as a design element on his book jackets and personal websites. Shaving off his hair, he says, "turned out be a highly leveraged marketing choice."

Michael Landau, 41, took the plunge once he began losing hair in his late teens. Balding at a young age made him shy and uncomfortable, but shaving off the remaining strands nudged him out of his shell. It even helped lead to a job with Mr. Godin years ago, when the two men bonded over their baldness.

Mr. Landau, now CEO of Drybar, a chain of blow-dry salons, says the bald look "makes me more confident and more strong, which probably makes people respect me more." Plus, in the hair business, he says, "people remember the bald guy."

Oct 01
Lack of vitamin D linked to heart disease
Low levels of vitamin D are associated with a markedly higher risk of myocardial infarction and early death, according to a Danish study.

Vitamin D deficiency traditionally has been linked with poor bone health, according to background information in the study. However, the results from several population studies have indicated that low levels also may be linked to a higher risk of ischemic heart disease. Other studies have shown vitamin D deficiency may increase blood pressure.

With the new study, which involved more than 10,000 Danes, "we have now examined the association between a low level of vitamin D and ischemic heart disease and death in the largest study to date," Dr. Peter Brondum-Jacobsen, the study's lead author and a member of the Clinical Biochemical Department at Copenhagen University Hospital, said in a news release.

The researchers found extremely low levels of vitamin D, compared with optimal levels, are linked to a 40% higher risk of ischemic heart disease, 64% higher risk of MI, 57% higher risk of early death and 81% higher risk of death from heart disease.

"With this type of population study, we are unable to say anything definitive about a possible causal relationship," Borge Nordestgaard, clinical professor at the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences at the University of Copenhagen and senior physician at Copenhagen University Hospital, said in the news release. "But we can ascertain that there is a strong statistical correlation between a low level of vitamin D and high risk of heart disease and early death.

"The explanation may be that a low level of vitamin D directly leads to heart disease and death. However, it is also possible that vitamin deficiency is a marker for poor health generally."

The scientists are working to determine whether the connection between a low level of vitamin D and the risk of heart disease is a genuine causal relationship.

"The cheapest and easiest way to get enough vitamin D is to let the sun shine on your skin at regular intervals," Nordestgaard said. "There is plenty of evidence that sunshine is good, but it is also important to avoid getting sunburned, which increases the risk of skin cancer. Diet with a good supply of vitamin D is also good, but it has not been proven that vitamin D as a dietary supplement prevents heart disease and death."

Oct 01
One in every three senior citizens abused in India, says study
One in every three senior citizens is abused in India. On International Senior Citizens Day, CNN-IBN turns its attention to the elderly who deserve to spend their golden years in dignity. An NGO working for the aged has now found that more that 50 per cent abuse cases come from within the family.

Thrown out of his own house by how own family members, 80-year-old GS Bhatia had no option but to find solace in an old age home. Mr Bhatia said that his own son and daughter-in-law abused him and even refused to give him food days before abandoning him.

Mr Sahani, 84-years-old, also has a similar story of neglect and humiliation to tell. "My son slapped me, my daughter-in-law told me that she's fed me for 15 years and can't feed me any more. They asked me to leave them," he said.

Such shocking abuse of the elderly has been growing in India, claimed a study done by an NGO. The study reportedly found that one in every three senior citizens is abused mainly by their own family. In 56 per cent of the cases, sons were the chief abusers while in 23 per cent cases, daughters were the culprits.

"This survey was done to create awareness and we found some disturbing facts like 75 per cent of the elders being abused were living with their," HelpAge India Communication Manager Sonali said. The study has more shameful findings. It claims that 55 per cent of those who were abused didn't report it, 5O per cent elders continued tolerating the abuse for more than five years and 80 per cent of the elderly continued suffering to save the family honour.

Madhya Pradesh reportedly has the highest rate of abuse followed by Assam, Uttar Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh. In Delhi, such cases have reportedly risen from 12 per cent to 29.8 per cent in just one year. India has roughly 100 million senior citizens. With the UN saying that by 2050, there will be more than 300 million senior citizens, it is about time we think of how to sensitise the young to prevent such cases of abuse.

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