I was told I couldnât get an Afro wig after chemo

From the age of seven Anastasia Cameron was turned away from hairdressers because she was told they âdonât do Afro hairâ.
The 39-year-old woman, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2021, said little had changed when she needed a wig after chemotherapy as an adult.
âIt was horrible, they basically said I couldnât have African hair,â she said. âYouâre in a traumatic situation after being diagnosed and dealing with physical changes â but I was isolated again and had to manage the situation on my own.â
This experience took him back to his childhood when he was sent away from salons or made fun of by his peers after getting cuts by inexperienced stylists.

âAt that moment I felt there was something wrong with me,â he said.
âThe stigma I endured for a long time â that traumatizes you.â
When Ms. Cameron needed wigs of the appropriate texture after cancer treatment, they were not available.
But changes to the NHS Wales contract now mean wig suppliers will have to offer a wider range for different ethnic communities.
This inspired Ms Cameron, a hairdresser and wig maker from Rouse, Vale of Glamorgan, to bid for one of the NHS Wales contracts herself, meaning she now ensures cancer patients have the option to choose their Was not close.
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He said there is still a huge skills gap between hairdressers who are not trained to cut his type of curly or Afro-textured hair.
âI recently went to get my first haircut after chemotherapy and I had to talk to the person because they didnât know how to do that. I have the experience of being able to do that, but I shouldnât have to do that. â

This gap in appropriate care is a familiar theme for Denise Mayhew, ambassador for cancer charity Black Women Rising.
But inequalities are also seen within health care. His own treatment was excellent, he said, but it is not ideal.
âWe may all be one human race, but we are certainly not treated the same,â said the 42-year-old blood cancer survivor. multiple myeloma In 2018.

âYou have people coming to your medical team who are saying âPlease treat me like a white woman so I can live.â Itâs heartbreaking.â
She explained that âmyths and taboosâ often create barriers to diagnosis, with women being portrayed as âblack and strongâ, meaning their pain is dismissed.
Cultural attitudes and religious beliefs within communities may make people hesitant about chemotherapy, although work is being done to âtry to change the narrativeâ.

Breast cancer surgeon Zoe Barber admitted that âthe fear of being dismissed by the doctor was absolutely justifiedâ.
Women in those groups are typically diagnosed at a later date, resulting in more aggressive treatment and worse prognosis, she said.
Ms. Barber provided additional support after treatment was not always sufficient.
The prostheses offered after mastectomy âuntil quite recently came in either white or light peach and if youâre a woman who doesnât have fair skin, itâs too âotherâ for youâ.
âAs physicians we must advocate for those women as well. I think itâs still important that we recognize that we are still failing those women and there is still a lot of work to be done.â

Judy Rice of Tenovus Cancer Care said the lack of data on patient ethnicity remains a âsignificant barrier to equitable health care.â
âWe have called for data on patientsâ ethnicity to be collected because our research has shown that it is not routinely collected, despite orders to do so,â he said.
âWe understand that activity is on the horizon, but progress has been very slow.
âNot only can this data inform tailored treatment pathways, but it can also highlight underrepresented groups in research and clinical trials, disparities in screening, and the need for essential services such as hair replacement during treatment â
The Welsh Government said it took health inequalities âvery seriouslyâ and had implemented âa number of improvements to data collection and analysisâ.
It said it would continue to work with NHS Wales to âdetermine how we can get data on ethnicityâ so that data is available when people are accessing healthcare.