Bras Actually Make bosoms "Saggier" - RESEARCH
Women who took off their bras for good experienced a 7mm lift in their Tips each year they didn’t wear a bra. Researchers also found that bra-less women developed firmer bosoms and saw their stretch marks fade.
Researcher Prof. Jean-Denis Rouillon, a sports science expert from the University of Besançon in eastern France claims that “bras are a false necessity,” according to The Local.
“Medically, physiologically, anatomically – bosoms gain no benefit from being denied gravity,” said Rouillon. “On the contrary, they get saggier with a bra.”
Rouillon and his team spent years measuring the changes in the bosoms of 330 women using a simple slide rule and caliper at the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire (University Hospital) in Besançon, where he carried out his research.
He found that no evidence that bras helped ease back pain. Instead, he found that the chest supports could even add to the problem.
According to The Connexion, the findings suggest that bosoms would gain more tone and support themselves if no bra was used. Researchers explain that bras limit the growth of supporting bosom tissues, leaving the bosom to wither and degrade more quickly.
The study found that women who took off their bras for good experienced a 7mm lift in their Tips each year they didn’t wear a bra. Researchers also found that bra-less women developed firmer bosoms and saw their stretch marks fade.
Some of the women who took part in Rouillon’s study told France Info that not wearing a bra helped ease their back pains.
Capucine, a 28-year-old participant in Rouillon’s study, swears by the results and hasn’t worn a bra for two years.
“There are multiple benefits: I breathe more easily, I carry myself better, and I have less back pain,” Capucine said, according to France Info.
However, Rouillon says the findings do not mean all women should throw away their bras.
“It would be dangerous to advise all women to stop wearing their soutien-gorge as the women involved were not a representative sample of the population,” Rouillon said, according to The Connexion.
While his initial results “validated the hypothesis that the bra is a false ‘need’,” he says that women who have been wearing bras for a long time would not gain any benefit from stopping now.