“UK Health & Beauty Retailers 2010 - new market report and analysis - PR Inside” plus 1 more |
UK Health & Beauty Retailers 2010 - new market report and analysis - PR Inside Posted: 23 Nov 2010 01:40 PM PST 2010-11-23 22:41:48 - UK Health & Beauty Retailers 2010 - a new market research report on companiesandmarkets.com The UK health & beauty market has been resilient through the economic downturn. While there is an essential element to health & beauty consumers are increasingly viewing sectors such as skincare, as necessity items helping to drive growth. UK Health & Beauty Retailers 2010 examines expenditure trends, the performance of the market leaders and the opportunities and threats in the sector.Features and benefits Highlights Cosmetics will see the highest growth rate in 2010 at 5.4% maintaining its 8.0% share of the health and beauty market. With new products being introduced continuously, innovation is a key driver in the cosmetics category While department stores have faced strong price competition from grocers and have lost customers who have traded down to cheaper products not sold in department stores, the channel has managed to grow its share. Many customers continue to buy into premium health & beauty products as they become increasingly concerned with looking youthful. Your key questions answered Click for report details: www.companiesandmarkets.com/Market-Report/uk-health-beauty-retai .. Browse all Retail Market Research Reports Browse all Retail Company Profile Reports Browse all Latest Market Research Reports About Us This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
More beauty spots mean better health, younger looks - Kerala Next Posted: 23 Nov 2010 09:46 PM PST An abundance of moles can be a matter of embarrassment to many, but scientists say people who have more than 100 beauty spots have tougher bones and fewer wrinkles. The tougher bones reduce risk of osteoporosis (brittle bones), while fewer wrinkles can help them look up to seven years younger, reports the Daily Mail. A research team from King's College, London, believes its findings could pave the way for a cream which 'switches off' wrinkles, doing away with the need for collagen injections or plastic surgery. "Until recently, everyone ignored moles," said genetics expert Prof. Tim Spector. "Most people start losing them at 40 but we now know people who don't age and are baby-faced at 60 are likely to have lots of them." His team looked at 1,200 non-identical female twins aged between 18 and 79 and found that those with more than 100 moles were half as likely to develop osteoporosis compared to those with fewer than 25. People with lots of moles are known to produce white blood cells with unusually long telomeres, a part of DNA which allows it to replicate, preventing deterioration. The longer it is, the more time before it starts to degrade - much like the plastic tip on a shoelace. These findings were presented at the Royal Society of Medicine in London. This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
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