Shoes That Hurt Women . . . And the Women Who Love Them
By Susan Okie
Doctors have determined that high heels can be hazardous to your health.For several years, foot surgeons have been warning women that wearing shoes with high heels and narrow toes can lead to painful and often permanent foot deformities. Now, a study has found the first evidence that high-heeled shoes may also contribute to knee arthritis in women.

Meanwhile, a group of surgeons took their pro-foot campaign a step farther, announcing results of extensive tests of comfort, fit and flexibility that were performed on 11 shoe styles that they found to be the most popular among working women. The group, the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society (AOFAS), awarded a “Seal of Approval,” similar to the American Dental Association seal that often appears on tubes of toothpaste, to four styles that passed all the tests. They’re not revealing which shoes failed.

“We’re not trying to identify bad shoes,” said Cherise Dyal, an assistant professor of orthopedic surgery at New York’s Albert Einstein College of Medicine. “Our goal is to educate women on how to buy shoes appropriately . . . to prevent problems and pain.”

For many women, painful and misshapen feet are the ultimate cost of a long-term love affair with high-heeled shoes. In the United States, women visit orthopedic surgeons for foot problems four times as often as men, and they undergo about 87 percent of operations performed to correct acquired foot deformities, such as bunions and hammer toes. In societies where people go barefoot or wear flat sandals, acquired foot deformities in adults are rare and their frequency is the same in both sexes.

The deformities that often develop after years of wearing high-fashion pumps are similar to foot problems that were formerly seen in Chinese women whose feet had been bound by their parents, said Michael J. Coughlin, a clinical professor of orthopedics at Oregon Health Sciences University who practices in Boise, Idaho.

When the feet of such Chinese women were X-rayed, “the deformities were not in the bones at all. They’re just in the joint,” Coughlin said. “Women of today . . . are achieving the same thing. They’re causing these joint deformities by binding their feet in constricting footwear.”

Problems tend to develop in the front half of the foot (the forefoot) and include bunions, hammer toes or claw toes and bunionettes, conditions common in middle-aged or older women that often require corrective surgery. A bunion is a bump or enlargement on the inner side of the foot, at the base of the big toe. A bunionette is a similar enlargement on the outer side, at the base of the smallest toe. Hammer toes and claw toes are deformities in which the toe curls and its joints protrude upward, often rubbing against a shoe and causing painful corns. Foot structure, heredity and the elasticity of ligaments can predispose some people to such deformities. But narrow, pointed shoes and high heels also contribute, by compressing the toes and increasing forces on the forefoot during standing and walking. With a 3 1/4-inch heel, pressure on the forefoot is more than seven times greater than with a flat shoe.

Coughlin analyzed 3,000 surgeries for forefoot deformities performed in his Boise practice over a 15-year period and found that 87 percent were done on women’s feet. Women had 94 percent of the bunion surgeries, 90 percent of bunionette surgeries, 81 percent of hammer toe surgeries, and 89 percent of surgeries for neuromas, a painful thickening of a nerve that runs between two toes.

Surgery can improve such foot deformities but usually can’t restore the foot completely to normal, said Michael W. Bowman, a foot and ankle surgeon who chairs the AOFAS Orthosis and Footwear Committee. “I tell patients up front, ‘You can’t expect to have surgery and go back and wear this type of shoe,’ ” he said.

In addition to choosing unhealthy shoe styles, women frequently buy shoes that are too narrow for their feet, according to a 1993 survey by the AOFAS. Of 356 women who responded to the survey and had their feet measured, 88 percent were wearing shoes that were too narrow, by an average of one-half inch. Most women’s feet are between 3 1/4 inches and 3 3/4 inches wide, Coughlin said, but fashion shoes are usually only three inches wide.

Problems With Knees

New evidence, published last week in the British medical journal The Lancet, suggests that high heels are also bad for women’s knees. D. Casey Kerrigan, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School who specializes in physical medicine and rehabilitation, used special laboratory equipment to analyze the forces that were generated in the knees of 20 healthy women while walking in high-heeled shoes. The research subjects, whose average age was 35, habitually wore high heels.

Kerrigan found that rotational forces compressing the inner part of the knee joint were 23 percent higher when the women walked in high heels than when they walked barefoot. High heels also prolonged the strain and pressure on the smaller joint between the kneecap and the underlying thigh bone, the patellofemoral joint. Both joints are common sites of osteoarthritis in women.

No one had previously suggested that high-heeled shoes might contribute to knee arthritis. “This is a completely new direction,” said Kerrigan. She said the shoes prevent the ankle from working as it should to absorb part of the force of walking, so she suspected they might result in abnormal rotational forces on the knee joint. Walking in high heels tends to rotate a woman’s knees outward into a more bowlegged position.

Kerrigan said forces of the magnitude measured in her study have been shown to cause arthritis in rats. She added that high heels also make older women less stable and contribute to falls. “I’m telling anybody who has knee arthritis, ‘Just don’t wear them!’ ”

Certifying Healthy Shoes

How should women choose shoe styles that are best for their feet? The AOFAS provides advice for consumers on shoe fit and runs a training program for shoe salesmen, but the society’s surgeons worried that they weren’t getting their message across. So, a few years ago, the group came up with the idea of testing shoes for desirable qualities and awarding some styles a “Seal of Approval” that might help guide consumers. A respected European firm, widely consulted by the shoe industry, would perform the tests. The AOFAS asked shoe companies to submit their products and to pay the cost of testing, about $1,500 for each style tested.

“We didn’t have as enthusiastic a response as we would have liked,” recalled San Francisco foot surgeon Glenn B. Pfeffer. “Nobody seemed to submit their shoes very much.”

Two Rockport shoes, the Mirabel pump and the Somerdale casual shoe, were awarded the seal in 1996. No other companies came forward with shoes for testing. So this year, the AOFAS surveyed 499 American working women about the shoe styles they wore to work, chose the 11 most popular, and had them tested.

The tests evaluated such factors as toe shape, heel configuration, slip resistance, cushioning, breathability, flexibility and heel shock absorption, Bowman said. Professional shoe-testers with standard-size feet also wore the styles while walking on treadmills and provided a “comfort index.”

Four models, representing a range of styles and prices, passed with flying colors. They were the Easy Spirit “Casual Cypress” flat, retailing for $60; the Enzo Angiolini “Disso” pump, which has a 1 4/5-inch heel and sells for $85; the Reebok “Gusto DMX” athletic shoe, retailing for $70; and the Payless ShoeSource “Sculp,” a pump with a 1 3/5-inch heel that sells for just $10.

Bowman said awarding the AOFAS Seal of Approval to these styles doesn’t mean other shoes couldn’t also qualify. “This is in no way an attempt to say, ‘These are the only good shoes in America,’ ” he said.

Nevertheless, a shoe industry representative criticized the program as unfair.

“The whole thing is a farce,” said Dick Jacobson, president of the Fashion Footwear Association of New York (FFANY). “Those shoes aren’t any more healthy than anybody else’s.”

Jacobson said the shoe industry has worked hard during the past decade to create new shoe designs and comfort features. “We don’t need these guys to tell us what to do,” he said. “We have studied all the problems of shoemaking much more than they have.”

He said women are smart enough to choose comfortable footwear. “A woman who is going to be on her feet all day should not wear big high heels and tight-fitting shoes,” he said. “Every intelligent woman knows that.”

Bowman and other foot specialists contended that many women still feel compelled to wear high heels because they think it’s expected at certain jobs or social events, or because they’re fashion-conscious.

“The fashion industry spends millions of dollars convincing American women that unless they wear a high-heeled shoe shaped like an ice cream cone, somehow they are not fashionable,” Bowman said.

Coughlin, the Idaho foot surgeon, said many women also want their feet to appear smaller and their legs longer. “Some people say the reason they [wear them] is it makes a woman walk in sort of an unstable, mincing gait that makes them look . . . a little more vulnerable,” he said. “I think there are a lot of sexual overtones in this that, truly, I don’t understand.”

High-Heel Popularity Waning

High-heeled shoes were invented during the Renaissance, and at various periods in history they have been fashionable for both sexes. During the 20th century, however, they’ve been worn almost exclusively by women.

Surveys by the AOFAS suggest their popularity is on the wane. This year, the society questioned 499 women between the ages of 20 and 50 about what shoes they wore to work. Participants were selected at random. They had to be employed full-time in a job that did not require them to wear standardized shoes, but they had to answer yes to the question, “Do you have the perception that there is a dress code where you work, either written or unwritten?”

The participants held a variety of jobs, ranging from bankers, lawyers and engineers to salesclerks, factory workers and secretaries. Sixty-nine percent said they wore flat shoes to work, including 23 percent who wore athletic shoes. Only 3 percent wore shoes with heels taller than 2 1/4 inches. No job category contained a disproportionate number of women who wore high heels, Dyal said.

When the society performed a similar survey in 1990, 49 percent of women reported wearing flat shoes to work (including 14 percent who wore athletic shoes) and 37 percent said they wore high-heeled shoes.

Younger women appear to be much more likely to choose shoes for comfort. In this year’s survey, 30 percent of the women aged 20 to 30 wore athletic shoes to work, and none wore high heels. Among women between 41 and 50 years old, 21 percent wore athletic shoes and 3 percent wore high-heeled shoes.

If that trend continues, it is likely that during the next couple of decades, the number of women in their forties, fifties and sixties having foot surgery will go down, said Coughlin.

“I can have the pleasure of seeing my daughters and their daughters have good feet and not have surgery,” he said. “That will make me happy, because I’ll have done something for women.”

Choosing Shoes That Fit

Poorly fitting shoes are painful and can promote foot problems. To make sure new shoes fit properly, follow this advice from the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society, the National Shoe Retailers Association and the Pedorthic Footwear Association.

  • Sizes vary among brands and styles. Judge the shoe by how it fits your foot, not by the size marked on the box.
  • Select a shoe that conforms as nearly as possible to the shape of your foot.
  • Have your feet measured regularly. Foot size changes as you grow older.
  • One foot is usually bigger than the other. Measure both, and fit shoes to the larger foot.
  • Fit shoes at the end of the day when your feet are largest.
  • Stand up and check that there is at least 3/8 inch to 1/2 inch of space in the shoe beyond your longest toe.
  • Make sure the ball of your foot fits comfortably into the widest part of the shoe.
  • Don’t buy shoes that feel tight, expecting them to stretch.
  • Your heel should fit comfortably in the shoe with minimum slippage.
  • Walk in the shoe to make sure it feels comfortable.

Memorable Moments in Shoe History

Approx. 4000 B.C.
Earliest depictions of shoes (flexible leather pieces held in place with lacings) in ancient Egyptian murals on tombs and temples.
Approx. 200 B.C.
Platform sandals called kothorni, with high wood or cork soles, become popular among Roman tragic actors.
Approx. 1000 A.D.
At Saxon weddings, father of the bride customarily presents the groom with one of the bride’s shoes, symbolizing transfer of his authority over her. The bride’s shoe is thrown to the bridesmaids; the one who catches it will be next to marry.
1154-1189
King Henry II of England popularizes shoes with narrow, pointed toes. Legend says they hid his deformed toes.
1189-1199
Knights of Richard the Lionhearted begin to wear sollerets, downward-curving pointed toes, to keep their feet from slipping out of stirrups.
1215
A law passed in Paris bans university professors from wearing shoes with long, pointed toes. However, shoe toes, a symbol of rank, grow longer and pointier during the next two centuries, culminating by about 1382 in the spiky-toed cracowe. Kings and princes sometimes wore toes 30 inches long.
1386
Knights fighting in the Battle of Sempach in Switzerland are forced to amputate their shoes’ long toes after dismounting before they can advance on foot.
Approx. 1500
Shoes begin to be made in two pieces, with a flexible upper attached to a heavier, stiffer sole. This leads to the introduction of the heel, devised as a better way of keeping a rider’s foot in the stirrup. Heeled boots for men quickly become fashionable.
1509-1547.
Henry VIII of England favors wide-toed shoes, sometimes 12 inches across, which had to be stuffed to keep them on his feet.
1533
Short-statured Italian bride Catherine d’Medici, married at 14 to the Duke of Orleans, wears shoes with two-inch heels to exaggerate her height. The high heel may have been invented by Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519).
1553-1558
Mary Tudor (”Bloody Mary”), another vertically challenged monarch, wears heels as high as possible. From this period until the early 19th century, high heels are frequently in vogue for both sexes.
Mid-1500s
An extreme shoe style called chopines, popular among women in Italy, Spain and France, had pedestals of cork or wood as tall as 24 inches. A Venetian lady wearing chopines needed two servants to help her in and out of a gondola.
1628
Pilgrims arrive in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. A law is passed prohibiting “excess in bootes.”
1660
French shoemaker Nicholas Lestage, so clever at his trade that some accuse him of sorcery, becomes shoemaker to Louis XIV. The heels of Louis’s shoes, some decorated with miniature battle scenes, are as tall as five inches. High “Louis” heels are also fashionable for ladies.
1745
Madame de Pompadour, tiny-footed favorite of Louis XV, popularizes high, narrow “Pompadour” heels. Ladies tape their feet to reduce their apparent size and faint at court.
1793
Marie Antoinette ascends the scaffold to be executed wearing two-inch heels. However, in the wake of the French Revolution heels become lower than at any time in the 18th century.
1794
Quincy Reed opens America’s first retail shoe store in Boston. Around this period, Marc Isambard Brunel (1769-1849) invents machines for cutting soles and riveting them to uppers.
Early 1800s
Flat shoes and Grecian-style sandals become popular.
Approx. 1865
The “sneaker” or plimsoll, a canvas-topped, rubber-soled shoe, is invented for badminton and tennis. Ladies’ heel heights vary but stay below two inches during the rest of the century.
1904
The ladies’ “pump” or court shoe, a British invention, reaches America. Shoe stores begin to stock shoes with a range of widths around now.
Approx. 1955
Tall “stiletto” heels for women’s shoes, invented in Italy, become a fashion rage. Very pointed toes come into vogue for both sexes.
1970s
Return of the platform shoe.
1980s
Athletic shoes diversify and gain popularity. Some women begin wearing them to work or for commuting.

Sources: “Put Your Foot Down” by Florence E. Ledger (The Uffington Press). “Shoes” by June Swann (B.T. Batsford Ltd.).


Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company