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Hair Loss News Archives
January 2006
Gooch hair adverts 'misleading'
Jan 2006
Viewers were misled by adverts for an anti-hair loss laser treatment, featuring
sports stars, the Advertising Standards Authority has ruled.
The watchdog said Advanced Hair Studio had failed to prove that its infrared
radiation treatment was effective.
Ex-England cricketer Graham Gooch and former England rugby player Austin Healey
appeared in the commercials.
Advanced Hair Studio said "tens of thousands of people" across the world had
benefited from its treatments.
After investigating two viewers' complaints, the Advertising Standards Authority
(ASA) said the therapy's effectiveness had not been proved.
One advert showed Healey with his head in a laser device saying he had re-grown
his hair with Advanced Hair Studio's laser hair therapy programme.
Members of the public were shown backing the treatment, saying "after a few
months I stopped losing my hair" and "my hair loss has now stopped completely".
Serious flaws
However, an expert told the industry watchdog it was not accepted that infrared
radiation could reverse male or female hair loss.
He drew attention to "serious flaws" in a study provided by the advertiser to
support its claims.
And the commercials did not make it clear that continuous treatment was needed
to maintain any benefits gained from the hair loss therapy, the ASA added.
The ASA concluded: "We were concerned viewers would be misled into thinking the
advertiser offered a treatment that was more effective than it actually was."
Advanced Hair Studio said Healey, Gooch and Australian cricketer Shane Warne
were among 300,000 people worldwide who have taken up the laser therapy or the
company's patented strand-by-strand hair replacement procedure.
It added: "Nothing in this adjudication undermines the fact that tens of
thousands of people across the world continue to benefit from Advanced Hair
Studio's pioneering treatment.
"We have stopped them from going bald and helped them to replace their hair -
facts which no-one can dispute."