Showing posts with label Cancer Wigs and Hair Replacement For Children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cancer Wigs and Hair Replacement For Children. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Cancer Wigs and Hair Replacement For Children

By Travis Keeler



If a child who suffers from hair loss doesn't have an Alopecia condition, most likely that child has lost his hair as a result of cancer treatments. When the child loses his hair, they must seek out hair replacement options, such as long-term Cancer wigs and other solutions that provide hair replacement for children.

When children are diagnosed with cancer, they face a battle on two fronts: first, fighting the Cancer itself and the draining, ongoing medical fight that nearly always includes some form of chemotherapy and radiation. And when the effects of this battle have taken their toll, children face a battle on a second front; they suffer from hair loss, often requiring them to wear short or long-term Cancer wigs.
Cancer treatments have a battering effect on a child's health and immune system and can seriously affect his or her appearance as well. Medical hair loss necessitating the use of Cancer wigs is the most common result of oncology treatments and might well be the one aspect of Cancer treatment that children dread the most. Why? Because it makes them feel and look different from their friends. It makes them look ill, even after they're done with Cancer treatments. And by the time a child whose been through all this is feeling well and ready to jump back into life, hair loss may stand in their way.
No child really wants to feel different. Being bald, however, can make children the target of teasing and thoughtless comments from other children who don't have the same filters or understanding adults do. A bad, ill-fitting wig on a child who needs a nonsurgical hair replacement for children option, such as Cancer Wigs is almost as bad as being bald. The emotional toll all of this teasing can take can be as devastating as the Cancer treatment itself, causing children to stay inside, decline invitations to parties and generally take a big step back from the recovery that will help them heal.

Charity organizations like Teens Unite Fighting Cancer are doing something about this situation. Aside from helping children with Cancer make connections with other kids like them, they are taking on the problem of medically-related hair replacement for children. They know what a financial burden the fight against cancer can be. Prohibitive costs of Cancer wigs stop many child cancer patients from seeking out help. Teens Unite Fighting Cancer also knows that a good Cancer wig is worth its weight in gold. That's why they have formed partnerships with some of the top medical hair replacement community's leaders to help kids get new hair while their own grows back. Teens Unite Fighting Cancer has made it possible for children fighting cancer to qualify for a grant to receive free nonsurgical hair replacement solutions like Cancer wigs and hair systems.
Caylee Bradhew, 14, had undergone surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation for a brain tumor. When she successfully finished with her treatments, she was left with no hair. Those who didn't know her well stared at her when she returned to school. She overheard others laughing at her ill-fitting, drug store wig. She felt as if she'd never get her old self back again. Until she heard about TeensUniteFightingCancer.org/. Caylee applied for and received a grant for a new, beautiful hair system made of a human hair - a high-end Cancer wig that mimicked her own hair down to the part. The first day she wore it was the first day she'd felt like herself since the whole Cancer ordeal began. And that was the day she really began to heal.

To qualify for a grant to have a Cancer wig or other nonsurgical hair replacement for children solution, the process is fairly straightforward and the application is not complicated. Because this charity and it's partnering hair replacement company that provides the Cancer wigs understand the urgency of the problem, and the emotional toll oncology- induced hair loss has taken on the child, the waiting time is short - one to two months following application. After approval, the child (who must fall between the ages of 13-24) will visit a clinic to be fitted by an expert technician with a high-end Cancer wig.
What is a medical hair replacement system? It's better than what most people think of as a "Cancer wig." First, a medical hair system is made completely from human hair, hand-tied individually, strand-by-strand by an expert technician. The hair is tied onto a breathable mesh fabric that is lightweight and virtually undetectable and can be worn day and night. These medical hair systems can be worn swimming, showering and playing hard. They will not come off like a typical Cancer wig. Children can rest easy with their new hair because no one will know it's not their own hair. And when their own hair grows back in? No problem. The hair system allows for this comfortably. Meanwhile, experts on hair replacement for children will style the hair system precisely for the child and style it and color it to match his or her original hair color.
These so-called "Cancer Wigs" are a godsend for children who are trying to recover from Cancer treatments because it gives them the very thing they need most: confidence. It allows them to move back into their lives, feeling whole again. And doctors agree, the best tool for healing is feeling good about yourself. Cancer wigs during and after Cancer treatment helps a great deal.

Travis M. Keeler is a hair loss expert with specialized knowledge of nonsurgical hair replacement and hair transplant surgery.

 For more information about the opportunities and pitfalls of hair replacement, please visit http://youtube.com/watch?v=47hkD2uWvQ4.