TORONTO - With big handbags becoming a key fashion accessory for working
women, health experts are warning they can also become a key health concern.
A model displays a Baby Phat handbag
in New York, September 8, 2006. Bags for women have become bigger as
designers combine briefcases with handbags. [Reuters]
|
Bags for women have become
bigger and heavier as designers combine briefcases with handbags and straps have
become longer but the extra leverage has many patients complaining of neck,
shoulder and back problems.
"I see so many women with neck pains and headaches and what I usually do is
look for their purse and pick it up," said Jane Sadler, a family practice
physician on the medical staff at Baylor Medical Center in Garland, Texas.
"We take it over to the scale and weigh it and usually they're anywhere from
7 to 10 pounds (3.1-4.5 kgs)...We're really going to see women with more and
more problems later on if we continue the big purse craze."
William Case, a physical therapist in private practice in Houston, Texas,
said an aggravated neck or shoulder can lead to upper back problems, meaning
pain may then be felt while working at a computer or playing sports.
He urged designers "to place a cute, educational caution tag on all bags to
inform of potential neck and shoulder dangers."
Above all, he recommended correct posture while carrying bulky purses,
keeping the head and shoulders aligned upright. Patients should also frequently
change the size and weight of purses carried.
"The extra-large purses are quite phenomenal. They look beautiful when the
women wear them, but I don't know how aware they are of the potential problems,"
Case said.
"Massage, anti-inflammatories and rest are good to help alleviate the
symptoms temporarily however the only real cure is patient education," case
added in a written message to the American Physical Therapy Association.
Case said children were recommended to carry no more than 10-15 percent of
their body weight in backpacks, which are effective at spreading loads carried,
but fashion consultants say they just aren't cool any more.
"The trend is either very large or very small. People go to the gym, they
have an extra pair of shoes, they have their make-up, so there's more stuff to
carry around," said Ellen Campuzano, president of the Committee for Color and
Trend, a fashion forecasting service.
"The backpack is really for a very casual customer, for a student with books,
that is not a fashion customer."
Professor Alan Hedge, an ergonomics specialist at Cornell University in New
York state, said similar health problems arose when laptops were first
introduced.
Traditionally women adopted better postures for carrying loads, such as
baskets on heads or strapping a papoose across the back, but placing objects on
one shoulder was one of the least efficient ways of carrying a load.
"This causes a great imbalance. You only have to see people carrying bags in
shopping centers, looking hunched up like Quasimodo," he said.
"If it (a big bag) is a fashion accessory, then occasional and symbolic use
is fine. If not, then keep it light."