GrownUps New Zealand

Hair Care for Seniors

Professional Tips you Wish you’d Known Sooner!

As we age, our bodies change – and that includes our hair. We stop producing the pigment that gave our hair its natural colour, and begin to ‘turn grey’. Our hair takes on a different texture, too, with most of it becoming harder, ‘glassier’, and less willing to ‘sit up and be styled’. Even more infuriating, our hair is less able to absorb the colour we may decide to introduce into it. Hair also thins (for both men and women), and it can change appearance at the hair line.

As with most aspects of growing older, thought and planning are required to work around new challenges. That’s why we asked a trusted hair stylist, experienced at working with senior clients, for her advice. In this first of a two part series, we look at ‘going grey’, ‘scalp care’ and ‘conditioning’.

‘Going grey’

Scalp care

Our scalp tends to become more ‘scurfy’ as we age, which is why many older people experience dandruff for the first time. However, rather than dandruff being caused by physical changes with our scalp as we age, it may actually be more connected with our ability to manage hair washing as we once did. As shoulders, arms, hands, and fingers are affected by the likes of arthritis, or our energy levels wane, the number of times we wash our hair each week reduces. We may also cut back on shampooing and conditioning in order to save money. The result is we may wash our hair just once or twice a week instead of every day.

The reduction of scalp stimulation that comes with less frequent washing means dead skin cells (surf) build up and up, eventually working their way through our hair and onto our clothes. The following are ways to overcome the problem of dandruff:

Conditioning

In Part 2 of Hair Care for Seniors, we’ll be taking a look at colour, product, thinning, and how you can help your friend or partner retain the hair style they want. Happy hair-caring!