Health
13 Before-and-Afters That Prove a New Haircut Can Make You Look Years Younger
Getting a fresh haircut isn’t only a mood-booster — it can also help shed years from your overall appearance. Not ready to make a big snip? Even making a little tweak can be age defying. To see this for yourself, we gathered 13 of our favorite before and after photos of real-life women who were shot for our sister publication First for Women, real-life women whose stylists posted their photos on Instagram and photos of celebrities. Read on to get a glimpse of the hair transformations — one might just inspire your next haircut!
1. Haircuts to look younger: A piecey pixie
“Hair that’s all one length and falls way past the shoulders ends up pulling the eye down and causing features to take on a droopier appearance,” says Igor Santos, a hairstylist at Christo Fifth Avenue Salon in New York City, who transformed Elizabeth Clayton’s (above) look. But a pixie does the exact opposite as it directs focus upward for an instant optical face-lift.
What to ask for: A textured pixie with stacked layers that’s also longer through the crown and on the sides.
2. Haircuts to look younger: A modern shag
Wioletta Krygowska (above) took her locks from limp to luscious with this shaggy cut by hairstylist Ammon Carver, who’s worked with Kate Beckinsale and Molly Sims. Thanks goes to the style’s texture from choppy layers throughout. Plus, adding in sun-kissed highlights gives hair even more depth and dimension.
What to ask for: A shag with short layers, lots of texture and cropped in layers throughout the crown.
Related: Shag Haircuts for Women Over 50 Add Instant Pizzaz + Volume to Any Length Hair
3. Haircuts to look younger: A cheeky crop
A layered, ear-length crop as shown on Margo Feltman above creates volume at the crown that conceals any thinner spots. And the movement from layers and wispy bags also creates an overall more energized look.
What to ask for: A cut that sit just beneath the ears with stacked, graduating layers and wispy side-swept bangs.
4. Haircuts to look younger: A blunt bob
A short, bob style that ends right below the ear (as shown on Kambri Crews above) is not only the perfect low-maintenance haircut that takes 5 minutes to style, it’s also ultra-flattering. And pairing it with side-swept bangs brings attention to gorgeous eyes.
What to ask for: A rounded bob that skims the jaw with light layering and side bangs long enough to be tucked behind the ear.
5. Haircuts to look younger: A layered shoulder sweep
It’s amazing how a little bit of layering can make a huge difference as shown by this hair transformation by @dannyflawlesshair on Instagram. Layers beautifully frame the face and make hair look thicker by giving strands youthful movement. Bonus: A smooth blowout also helps blur any fine lines or wrinkles.
What to ask for: A shoulder-length cut with graduating face-framing layers and textured, point-cut ends
6. Haircuts to look younger: A sleek bob
Another long to short hair transformation — this one by @awalkinmycomb on Instagram shows how a haircut can create a surgery-free face lift effect. This short bob directs the eye vertically, pulling eyes and cheeks with it. And ends that flip in toward the face beautiful frame it to put a spotlight on gorgeous facial features.
What to ask for: A jaw-length bob that has a rounded shape and long, blended layers.
7. Haircuts to look younger: An asymmetrical crop
This hair transformation by @centerstreetglam on Facebook took years off this woman’s appearance. A slanted crop not only removes dead, scraggly ends to restore shine to hair, but it also visually lifts features likes eyes and cheekbones. What’s more, side bangs cleverly conceal forehead furrows.
What to ask for: An ear-length cut that’s longer on one side with side-swept bangs.
Related: Stylists Are Raving About Pixie Cuts for Women Over 60 — Here’s Why
8. Haircuts to look younger: A layered crop
“This shorter style on Jean Smart draws focus upward so features look lifted and youthful, while also visually elongating and slimming the face,” says hairstylist Carrie Butterworth, who’s worked with Sigourney Weaver and Mena Suvari. “And the layers’ texture ensures the shorter style looks more modern than matronly.”
What to ask for: An ear-length cut with soft, blended side bangs and choppy layers throughout.
9. Haircuts to look younger: Layers + curtain bangs
Heidi Klum above is proof of how snipping in bangs and face-framing layers can take long locks from blah to beautiful. And curtain bangs cover the majority of the forehead to instantly mask wrinkles, while they also swing open like a curtain over the temples conceals any thinning along the hairline.
What to ask for: Brow-skimming curtain bangs that seamlessly blend into the rest of hair with face-framing layer.
10. Haircuts to look younger: A tapered pixie
Another flattering and anti-aging pixie cut? One that’s tapered like Maye Musk’s! “It restores bounce to fine strands while pulling focus up and away from droopy skin,” says Butterworth.
What to ask for: A pixie with light, blended layers that’s longer on top and shorter on the side.
11. Haircuts to look younger: A wavy long bob
Cropping long locks to shoulder length like Jennifer Garner did works wonders to turn back the clock, says hairstylist Kendall Dorsey, who’s worked with Alicia Keys and Kelly Rowland. That’s because shoulder-sweeping strands infused with light, yet volumizing layers creates hair-thickening oomph and movement to finer, thinnner tresses.
What to ask for: A shoulder-skimming cut with long, blended layers and soft side bangs.
12. Haircuts to look younger: A modern midi
Removing 3-4 inches as shown on Regina Hall above can make all the difference to elongate the face. “It draws the eye down at a slant, creating an angular look that helps slim a rounder face,” says hairstylist Chaz Dean, who’s worked with Eva Longoria and Drew Barrymore. Bonus: A blunt cut’s sharpness and structure optically contour and chisel the jawline, helping a double chin instantly recede.
What to ask for: A blunt cut with a slightly inverted silhouette that sits just above the shoulders.
13. Haircuts to look younger: A flippy bob
To take the focus off of harsh features, which can be emphasized when hair falls past the shoulders, Dean suggests swapping to a shorter cut with flippy ends like Claire Danes above. This draws attention to hair and optically softens any harsh angles. Even better? The cropped ‘do makes finer strands appear denser.
What to ask for: A jaw-length cut with angled, texturized razor-cut ends.
For more anti-aging hair tips and tricks, click through these stories:
8 Updos That Add Volume To Thin Hair: Celebrity Stylists Give the Easy How-Tos
The 10 Best Haircuts For Thin Hair That Make Hair Look Fuller from Every Angle
How To Create Sock Curls + More Heatless Styles That Add Volume to Fine Hair
Health
Elderberry Boosts Weight Loss and Improves Blood Sugar, New Study Shows
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Health
Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo loses flamingo, seal to bird flu
The Avian Influenza has claimed the lives of a Harbor Seal and a Chilean Flamingo at Chicago’s Lincoln Park Zoo.
The zoo announced they received results that confirmed the highly pathogenic Avian Influenza was the cause of Teal, a Chilean Flamingo, and Slater, a Harbor Seal’s death.
“This is sad news for wildlife and for the zoo team. Not only are we facing the first known cases of HPAI in animals in our care, but we’ve lost two amazing animals,” said Director of Veterinary Services Lester E. Fisher and Dr. Kathryn Gamble in a statement. “While highly pathogenic avian influenza is a naturally occurring virus in free-ranging waterfowl, more mammal species have been reported to be susceptible to HPAI since 2022.”
ONE STATE LEADS COUNTRY IN HUMAN BIRD FLU WITH NEARLY 40 CONFIRMED CASES
The zoo was unable to confirm the source of the exposure, but the Centers for Disease Control say that HPAI is spread through saliva, nasal secretion and the feces of infected birds.
They did say that zoo visitors are not at risk of contracting the disease from the animals at Lincoln Park zoo.
“Because highly pathogenic avian influenza is spread by free-ranging birds, it is no riskier to visit Lincoln Park Zoo than to enjoy a walk outdoors,” said President & CEO and ornithologist Megan Ross. “The zoo remains a safe place to connect with the animals in our care.”
BIRD FLU LEADS TO SEVERE HUMAN ILLNESS AND STATE OF EMERGENCY; EXPERTS DISCUSS RISK
The zoo has been monitoring HPAI, so there is a response plan in place. The plan addresses staff and animals. It includes personal protective equipment and removing cross contamination between species while monitoring individual animal behavior, according to a statement by the zoo. They have also closed the McCormick Bird House and will be closed until further notice.
The zoo also said in their statement that it’s important to keep personal pets indoors and away from wildlife.
“Sharing this news of highly pathogenic avian influenza in the area is important for our community at large,” said Director of the Urban Wildlife Institute Seth Magle. “To protect yourself, do not handle wildlife. Additionally, keep your pets safe by keeping cats indoors and dogs on a leash away from wildlife.”
Health
Insulin Prices Dropped. But Some Poor Patients Are Paying More.
Maricruz Salgado was bringing her diabetes under control. Thanks to a federal program that allowed health clinics that serve poor people to buy drugs at steeply discounted prices, she was able to pay less than $75 for all five of her diabetes medications every three months.
But in July, the cost of three of those drugs soared. Ms. Salgado, who does not have health insurance, suddenly faced costs of hundreds of dollars per month. She could not afford it.
Her doctor switched her to cheaper medicines. Within days of taking one of them, she experienced dizzy spells so severe that she said could barely keep up with her hectic daily schedule as a phlebotomist and an in-home caregiver. By the time she returned to the doctor in September, her blood sugar levels had ticked up.
“We were in a good place,” said Dr. Wesley Gibbert, who treats Ms. Salgado at Erie Family Health Centers, a network of clinics in Chicago that serves patients regardless of their ability to pay. “And then all the medicines had to change.”
The price hikes at the clinic happened for a reason that is symptomatic of the tangled web of federal policies that regulate drug pricing. In 2024, drug makers lowered the sticker price of dozens of common medications, which allowed them to avoid massive penalties imposed by the American Rescue Plan, the Covid relief package passed three years earlier. But that change backfired for low-income people like Ms. Salgado.
The decision to make these medications more affordable for large swaths of patients has quietly created another problem: a severe financial hit to the clinics that are tasked by the federal government with caring for the country’s poorest people. These nonprofit clinics operate in every state and serve nearly 32.5 million people, or about 10 percent of the country’s population.
“It’s the law of unintended consequences,” said Beth Powell, the director of pharmacy at The Centers, which operates five community health clinics in the Cleveland area. Ms. Powell said that while many consumers benefited from the companies’ decision to lower prices, “for our folks, that is not the case.”
More than 1,000 community health clinics around the country rely on a decades-old federal program that requires drug companies to offer them deep discounts.
Under the 340B program, as it is called, companies typically sell their brand-name drugs to clinics at a discount, at 23 percent or more off the list price. The same discount scheme applies to state Medicaid plans. But if a company raises a drug’s list price above the rate of inflation, a penalty kicks in, forcing it to offer even deeper discounts to the clinics.
For years, that meant that every time a company raised a drug’s list price above inflation, community clinics paid less for it. Many drugs, including insulin, essentially became free.
But the American Rescue Plan made a major change that hit drug companies with even larger penalties for raising prices. In January 2024, companies that continued to raise a drug’s price would have to pay state Medicaid plans every time those drugs were used, potentially costing the industry billions of dollars.
“That was a bridge too far” for the companies, said Antonio Ciaccia, a drug-pricing researcher who advises state governments and employers.
Manufacturers lowered the price of at least 77 drugs in 2023 and 2024, according to an analysis by a nonprofit that Mr. Ciaccia leads. The list includes widely used asthma drugs like Advair and Symbicort, as well as diabetes treatments like Victoza, which Ms. Salgado used before the change.
Once the pharmaceutical companies lowered their list prices, the inflation penalties evaporated. That meant community clinics had to start paying the usual discounts of 23 percent or more off the list price — far more than the pennies they used to pay.
“Unfortunately, the complexities of the U.S. health care system can reduce access and affordability for many,” Jamie Bennett, a spokeswoman for Novo Nordisk, which makes Victoza, said in a statement. “Even when we lower our prices, too often people don’t receive the savings — this is a problem.” She said the company also has patient assistance programs to make its products more affordable.
David Bowman, a spokesman for the Health Resources and Services Administration, which oversees the 340B discounts, did not respond to questions about how community health clinics were affected by the lowered drug prices. He said that other recent policies, including directing Medicare to negotiate the price of drugs, had lowered drug costs for low-income patients.
Because of a six-month lag in the way that 340B discounts work, clinics were hit by the change last July. Some clinics began calling patients before their prescriptions expired, offering to switch them to less expensive medicines even though they sometimes had more serious side effects. Others decided to cover the higher out-of-pocket costs, which required dipping into already scarce reserves.
Ms. Salgado said a nurse from Erie called over the summer to tell her about the pricing changes. Until then, she had paid about $15 for a three-month supply of Victoza, which is injected daily to keep blood sugar down. After July, the cost rose to more than $300.
After a few weeks, Ms. Salgado adjusted to the replacement, Byetta, and her dizziness subsided. But the drug must be injected twice a day instead of once. And Ms. Salgado must now use a special pharmacy 20 minutes from her house to qualify for the federal discount on the two insulin drugs she was switched to, the result of increasingly strict rules that companies are imposing on health clinics.
Ms. Salgado, who is 39, said she is determined to avoid the fate of her mother, who died of diabetes complications at 54. But keeping up with frequent pharmacy visits and medication changes is tough. “Sometimes it does get to a point where it’s like, I just don’t want to do this anymore,” she said.
The changes are also making it harder for community clinics to offer other services.
Under the 340B program, clinics buy the discounted drugs on behalf of their patients. When those patients have insurance, the clinics can then bill insurers for the regular, higher price, pocketing the difference. But now that spread — the difference between how much they pay for the drug and what insurance will cover — has dwindled. That has left clinics with less money to spend on services that are not otherwise covered by government grants or insurance, such as helping patients find housing.
At Valley View Health Center, a network of clinics that serves patients in rural Washington, the 340B money once financed a mental health program that employed eight therapists. In September, the clinic halted the program, laying off the therapists.
“It was such an abrupt change for us that it has definitely affected our ability to care for our patients the way that we needed to,” said Gaelon Spradley, the clinic’s chief executive.
Some patients who have seen costs go up have qualified for patient-assistance programs offered by drug makers. That was the case for Lorena Sarmiento, another patient at Erie Health who uses Lantus, an insulin pen. Last fall, after the 340B discount changed, she was quoted $490 at her pharmacy — the retail price for a box of insulin pens. Erie Health sent her to another pharmacy, which helped her sign up for a manufacturer’s coupon that lowered her cost to $35 per month.
Doctors and pharmacists at several health clinics said such drug-company assistance programs can be hit or miss. Sometimes they last for a limited time or require that a patient reapply regularly. Patients often have to be legal residents of the United States or have a fixed address.
“It’s a lengthy process, and it’s a lot of hoop-jumping,” said Michael Lin, the chief of pharmacy operations at Family Health Centers in Louisville, Kentucky.
Ms. Sarmiento and her husband, Luis, spend about $500 per month on her medical needs, including special food, medications and a glucose monitor. They are no longer facing the highest insulin price, but their costs are still 10 times what they were just a few months ago, when they spent about $10 on three months’ worth of insulin.
Mr. Sarmiento said he tries not to complain. “You always have to look on the good side,” he said. “But lately, that’s been hard.”
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