INT29
International/
Fashion/HealthHigh heels leave you low on
health and wealthBy Venkata VemuriLondon, Oct 1 IANS High heels eventually leave
women down at the heel, a new study says.Spindly stilettos and towering wedges walk you ultimately to the podiatrist's parade of bunions, corns, bent toes, trapped nerves and disfigured
feet.Those who
foot the
bill annually in
Britain alone add up to a few thousands, but the
bills they
foot are a bit high. Around 29 million pounds.And
mind you, free
treatment through the National
Health Service NHS means a lengthy waiting period. Private
clinics are the only alternative for the impatient.A study by
shoe brand MBT claims nearly one in three
foot operations on
women are to straighten toes disfigured by ill-fitting
shoes, mostly high heels.The cost of each such non-NHS procedure is about 1,200 pounds.If
all patients opted for private
treatment, these operations would cost a total of 10.4 million pounds a year.One in five
feet operations are to remove bunions, which is a structural deformity of the bones and the joint between the
foot and big toe. Based on the average cost of private
treatment of about 4,000 pounds, this equates to 10.5 million pounds a year. A further 3.3 million pounds a year would be spent on big toe joint replacement, 2.9 million pounds on operations for corns, 2 million pounds to remove trapped nerves, and 200,000 pounds to correct in-growing toe-nails, the study says.
Cosmetic surgery is also increasing in popularity with
treatments including "plumping" in which a dermal filler is injected into the ball of the
foot to make
walking more comfortable. The
survey of 1,000
women aged 15 and above found those in Liverpool and Manchester were most likely to end up with
foot injuries. Nearly half of
all women in the North-West of
Britain said they wore high heels five days or more a week.Forty-three percent of those in the South-East also chose heels five days a week. Four in ten reported having an
accident in their heels, with twisted ankles and tripping over the most common mishaps. The
Society of Chiropodists and Podiatrists explains that because stilettos force the wearer to raise their heel, the lower back bends to compensate. This puts pressure on nerves in the back and can cause sciatica. Another common problem is damage to the Achilles tendon. Sticking to heels no higher than one and a half inches can
help, the study advises.
Foot expert Emma Supple told Daily
Mail: "We need to mix and
match our choice of
footwear to allow our bodies time to recover. Heaven forbid that we ban heels from our wardrobes but we want to balance out our heel wearing days, protect our bodies from future damage and avoid injuries."--Indo-Asian
News Serviceven/rd/jg516
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