Wearing flip flops and having healthy feet do not mix well
Published: June 3, 2009
Updated: June 3, 2009
The young lady placed her purchases on the check-out counter. The sales associate asked, “You want all five pairs?” The customer said yes, smiling down at the multi-colored array below her.
A few moments later, the girl’s new accessories were in the shopping bag, ready to be selected for that perfect outfit. Scratch that, I mean any outfit.
Hot or cold, sunny or cloudy, summer or dead of winter, this young lady will be able to choose from any of her new Skittle-colored collection of trendy footwear. My guess is she already has seven pairs at home.
Flip flops: The footwear choice that used to be relegated to sandy beaches, pool visits, and communal showers is now just the shoe of choice.
Confession: I personally do not consider a piece of rubber with a strip of plastic for my toes an actual shoe. But what do I know?
I know that guys and girls wear them year round. If you are a pre-teen girl through the age of 30ish, you are more often than not going to choose a pair of flip flops over another type of shoe. And more and more guys are wearing them, especially in the same age bracket, from middle school age through young, urban professionals.
I tried to look up some sales figures for flip flops, but I mostly found information about flip flop sales, like the one Old Navy had recently. The casual retail store recently had a sale on flip flops where they went for $1. Some stores were cleaned out of them in a day.
Why am I going on about flip flops? First of all, they’ve taken over the world. (Next time you are out in public — store, church, theme park, work, funeral home, school — just look around.) Some of you can remember when flip flops just were not worn in work places or to church.
Secondly, flip flops are quite frankly hazardous to your health. I say this not as a fuddy- duddy who is just too yesterday to accept that fashions change and I just need to accept it.
They really can be the cause of foot, leg and back problems, according to medical research. Last June, researchers from Auburn University announced that flip flops change the walk of people who wear them. In the study presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Sports Medicine, biomechanists Justin Shroyer and Dr. Wendy Weimar found that the change in the gait for those wearing flip flops can lead to persistent foot and ankle pain.
The study showed that flip flop wearers take shorter steps, resulting in more stress on the body and a higher risk for muscle and joint pain. Keeping the toes scrunched up to hold the thong piece on the foot can cause throbbing in the toes. But because the toes are over-worked, the rest of the foot cannot operate as smoothly. When the toes cannot lift, and the foot doesn’t rise as high, the flip flopped foot kind of shuffles along.
Another foot expert, podiatrist Dr. John E. Mancuso, of Manhattan Podiatry Associates, pointed out the dangers of pronation. “Flip flops have a spongy sole, so when the foot hits the ground, it roles inward and the sponge allows it to roll even more than usual,” Mancuso told Forbes.com. “This is called pronation, and it causes many problems in the foot.” During pronation, the arch is released, offering less support for the feet. This can lead to pain in the heel, toes, arch and forefoot. Tendinitis can also be a result.
Summer is upon us, which is the more traditional time for flip flops. The problem is that for many of you, your feet have already taken a beating since last summer because you never stopped wearing them.
So, enjoy the summer and the freedom of foot you hold so dear. Just realize there is a price to pay for freedom, even for your feet.
Walker’s column appears each Wednesday on the editorial page.
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Reader Reactions
This is a first time read of the Star Exponent and thus the untimeliness of this comment. My friends, basically and fundamentally, shoes per se are unhealthy, except for orthopedic shoes, which I actually wore for a period of time. When taunted about their funny appearance, my response was yes, and the funniest thing about them is that they are the same shape as my feet. So are flip flops.
As a mother of two young children, I spend enough time getting their shoes on their feet, that I’m not really interested in spending any more time on my own footwear! The beautiful thing about flip flops is that I can get them on with a baby in one arm, a diaper bag slung across the other, and still holding on to my 2-year-old’s hand! AND they’re comfortable, stylish, and fun. Now that’s my kind of shoe!
Even before I was married, I hiked all over Europe, Africa, and D.C. in flip flops. They never once hurt my feet or ankles, or even gave me a blister. If you’re worried about shoes damaging people’s feet, I think high heels are the more likely culprit.
Women who want to ruin their feet and our eyes with these unsightly pieces of “footwear”. Please, at least wash your feet and trim your nails and don’t show your grunge to the world.
Now, about those horrid high platforms….....
Hats!
I vote we discuss hats next.
CLEARLY we need to generate bi-partisan support for federal legislation to deal with this horrible and wide-spread hazard to the health of our citizens.
Of course, the evil “flip-flop” lobby will probably step in to prevent any meaningful solution to this problem from being adopted. Oh well, that’s politics in today’s America.
;^)
No one has mentioned that at one time, it was VERBOTEN to wear such a piece of footwear to church, most work places, etc. It just wasn’t done. Safety was a factor, but they just were not acceptable. Obviously, the freedom of feet and the casual nature of our changing society has won out - they rule the floors.
The anthropologist/sociologist who thinks the podiatrists are charlatans ... Well, maybe there’s cause for more study on the matter. And they can make more shoe and foot history.
rjma…I absolutely agree..What a refreshing change. We’re starting at the feet and I suppose we can go on up with this argument to pants vs. skirts, string bathing suits, jeans that are falling off and have to be hand held to stay on and the list goes on and on. This, at least, doesn’t take a great deal of thought. UP WITH FLIP FLOPS!!!! Love ‘em.
I wear flip flops all summer and wool clogs or lined crocs all winter. I have never had much ankle pain, not a single callus, corn, twisted toes from too tight shoes, or deformed toenails. Neither is my foot permanently arched from wearing heels all day. As long as flip flops are made I will wear them IN THE SUMMER. I refuse to wear anything that ties, buttons, confines or has a back on it. I’m still wondering how men can put on socks and lace-up boots in the morning and not take them off until they go to bed at night. I must be claustrophobic.
Though not formally educated, I am a foot enthusiast. I notice people’s feet, whether they’re in flip-flops, sandals, sneakers, dress shoes, boots, or walking shoes. Some people have a strange gait, whether they’re knock-kneed, bow-legged, pigeon-toed, or slew-footed. Some people walk on their toes, some on their heels, some land on the outside of their feet as they step, some land on the inside.
My point? I’m pretty certain that scientific study can find problems in just about ANY of the items I listed above.
Flip-flops are simple, convenient, and in some cases, comfortable. They’re being made with more athletic-styled soles and wider straps, I assume to aid in comfort and distribution (so you don’t have to scrunch your toes so much to keep them on your feet.)
I’ve also seen in poor countries, people that make flip-flops from plastic bottles and twine. I’m pretty sure they were barefoot before finding the materials for their ingenuity.
Cool. We now have a flip-flop controversy. Maybe this will overtake illegal immigration and pit bulls.


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