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Cleveland Barbershop Offers Free Blood Pressure Screenings

Barbershops tend to be vital hubs of conversation and information in the communities they serve, but one West Side Cleveland barbershop is also becoming a hub for health.

Barbershop customers come in for a haircut鈥攁nd maybe some friendly banter about last night鈥檚 Cavs game, but when Phillip Parker came to Urban Kutz for a trim, he also got some good news.

"So, your blood pressure is perfect. The goal is less than 120 and less than 180," a Cleveland State medical student told Parker.

Every so often, the Old Brooklyn barbershop offers free blood pressure screenings for its customers.

Parker admits that it鈥檚 been a while since he鈥檚 gotten his blood pressure checked.

"Oh, it鈥檚 been some years, so that鈥檚 real convenient for me," Parker said. 

"They think they鈥檙e just coming in getting their hair cut," said Teresa Russell. "But a lot of times people have to wait to get a haircut鈥15-20 minutes, so it kind of works perfectly and we鈥檙e just here like, 鈥楬ey, do you want to get your blood pressure taken?鈥" 

Russell is one of the volunteer Cleveland State University medical students conducting the screenings.

"People can be hesitant to go to a doctor because they don鈥檛 know that the doctor has their best interests at heart," said Russell. "So, that鈥檚 why it鈥檚 really important to bring health screenings to a place where people are comfortable, like barbershops because people are already here. They鈥檙e comfortable with their barber. They鈥檙e comfortable with their friends here."

A 2017 study by the American Heart Association indicated that about 59 percent of African American males have high blood pressure. Compare that to white and Hispanic males鈥 less than 50 percent of both demographics have high blood pressure.

So who is the mastermind behind bringing health into the mix at a place where sports, music and politics dominate the discussion? That would be Waverly Willis, the owner of Urban Kutz.

"My clients were starting to disappear," Willis said. "When I would run into their wives or children or their girlfriend, I would ask, 鈥榃hat happened to Joe?鈥 And they would tell me that he passed away from a stroke or a heart attack, something to that."

Willis wanted to help, partially because he has his own history of blood pressure problems.

"I lost 200 lbs in the last couple of years. I was able to get off of the high blood pressure medication, which was one of my goals," Willis said.

Willis started the blood pressure program a few years ago by asking medical professionals he knew personally to lend a hand, but recently he partnered with Cleveland鈥檚 American Heart Association to make the process more formal. Brenda Parks is the multicultural initiatives director.

"It鈥檚 an ideal location for people to come and to learn mainly because they trust their barber. And because they trust their barber, they鈥檙e more likely to explain or share information that they wouldn鈥檛 normally share with anyone else," Parks said.

"There鈥檚 actually been a couple occasions that guys came in for a basic service, haircut, line-up or whatever," Willis recalled, "and we were checking their blood pressures and a couple times the gentleman鈥檚 blood pressure was so high, so elevated that we told them to skip the haircut and go to the emergency room."

Willis also founded the Urban Barber Association, a network of Cleveland area barbershops and salons working together to educate customers on community issues. Through this association, Willis put business competition aside and spread this idea around.

"I don鈥檛 want it to be strange to know that you can get your blood pressure taken at a barbershop. There鈥檚 more barbershops than hospitals. There鈥檚 more barbershops than urgent cares. So why not use these small satellites as beacons of hope and a resource center in our community," Willis said. 

With Willis' help, four other barbershops and salons in Cleveland provide blood pressure screenings. He hopes to double that number next year.

 

 

 

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Gabriel Kramer is a reporter/producer and the host of 鈥淣ewsDepth,鈥 海角破解版's news show for kids.