Ethical Pulse - from the Ethical Junction membership

Posts Tagged ‘health’

£20 free drive time with Whizzgo!

Friday, July 10th, 2009

WhizzGo, the pay-by-the-hour car club, is offering members of Ethical Junction a great offer this summer. With WhizzGo, you can hire a car when you need one for as little as an hour or as long as you need and with a fleet of low emission Citroens, you can be sure that by using WhizzGo you are reducing the number of cars on the road and cutting emissions and pollution in your area, as well as saving money.

Ethical Junction members and readers can now get £20 FREE drive time when they join WhizzGo. Just enter the promo code ETHICALJUNCTION09 when signing up at www.whizzgo.co.uk or give the WhizzGo team a call on 08444 77 99 66. Valid until September 2009.

And for any businesses who want to replace their current business transport with a greener option, they can take advantage of a three-month no obligation trial with WhizzGo. For more information, contact Peter Pratt on 08444 77 99 66 or email peter.pratt@whizzgo.co.uk 

Natracare Tops the League with Ethical and Eco Credentials

Friday, July 10th, 2009

We all
want and need to make changes to help protect our health and environment, but with
an ever increasing minefield of green and ethical claims out there, it can be
hard to know which brands we can really trust and those which will really make
a difference. Independent and respected awards and accreditations give an easy
way to weed out the true green brands.

The
organic and natural feminine hygiene brand, Natracare, has once again been
recognized for its ethical and environmental credentials having been given an
award from the Ethical Company Organisation, a fully independent endorsement
which outlines the ‘premier league’ of genuine corporate social
responsibility and ethical companies. During the analysis Natracare achieved an outstanding Ethical Accreditation
Index score, which places it at the top of the table for the Sanitary
Protection sector.

The
Natracare brand philosophy has always been to provide products that never
compromise health or the environment. Many brands of sanitary protection contain crude oil
plastics, synthetics, harsh chemicals and even dioxin residues, which can cause
intimate irritation for women and thousands of years of pollution for our
global environment. All Natracare tampons, pads, liners and wipes are 100%
chlorine-free, plastic-free and crude oil derivatives-free. In addition to the
new Ethical Award and a Women in Ethical Business award, Natracare is the first
feminine hygiene brand to have obtained an International Environmental Product Declaration (EPD[1]) a
scientifically validated, independently-assessed life cycle analysis which
determines the carbon footprint of the products as well as a Green
accreditation officiated by the Nordic
Ecolabel
organisation. The
entire range has been awarded the LOHAS award
for its environmental and sustainable criteria. The comprehensive
Natracare range is designed so that certified organic 100% cotton is next to
your skin. The range includes Soil Association certified Organic 100% Cotton
tampons with and without applicators, organic and natural Ultra pads and Panty
Liners, Organic Cotton Intimate Wipes, Organic Cotton Baby Wipes, Nursing pads,
Maxi pads and Dry & Light Pads for sensitive bladders.

Celebrating the 30th anniversary of the Sandinista Revolution

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

Celebrating
the 30th anniversary of the Sandinista Revolution

2.00
- 4.30pm Saturday 25 July  

Congress
House, Great Russell St, London WC1B
3LS
(tube
station: Tottenham
Court Rd)

Entry by
optional donation

 On 19
July tens of
thousands of Nicaraguans will gather in Managua to celebrate the 30th
anniversary of the overthrow of the Somoza dictatorship and the coming to power
of the Sandinistas. Join us to celebrate the astonishing  achievements against tremendous odds of
the Sandinista government in the 1980s, the legacy of the Revolution today
within the Latin America context and NSC’s
contribution to the global solidarity movement.

¨
Launch of the film ‘American Sandinista’ about the US war of aggression against Nicaragua
through the life of US volunteer Ben Linder, murdered by the contra in 1986. The
film will be introduced by the director Jason Blalock

¨
Grace
Livingstone, author of ‘America’s Backyard: from the Monroe
Doctrine to the War on Terror’

¨
Francisco
Dominguez, Latin America Department, Middlesex University

¨
Alicia
Sandino, charge d’affairs Embassy of Nicaragua (invited)

Further
information:
Nicaragua
Solidarity Campaign, campaigns@nicaraguasc.org.uk, Tel
020 7561 4836

www.nicaraguasc.org uk

What does your choice of water bottle say about you?

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

Over 50
styles available at new online shop Reusablebottle.co.uk

From a 1 litre bottle which folds down to the size of a (thin) wallet,
to completely natural charcoal-based water filters and an unsuspecting looking
bottle which purifies water from normally un-drinkable sources  www.resuablebottle.co.uk is a
one-stop shop for this year’s must have accessory – the reusable
bottle.  

Established with the aim to help reduce plastic waste,
ReusableBottle.co.uk is the only UK-based independent online bottle shop,
stocking more than 8 different brands of reusable bottles (and more to come) as
well as a host of practical and quirky accessories.   

Reusable Bottle.co.uk is doing more than just encouraging people to be
eco-savvy explains the brand’s founder Dan Brousson:  “We wanted to create
a single point where individuals could find a bottle which reflects their
personality, a practical need or conveys a message they want to share with the
world.”

Read on for top picks…

 

OUR TOP
PICKS

For The Multi-Tasker

Product Name:
           Source Liquitainer  

Size:
                          
Ranges from 1L – 4L

Cost:
                         
>From £5.50

 

What’s interesting about it?

This extra strong, lightweight, reusable bottle folds flat when empty
and stands stable when full!

  • Resistant to extreme temperature conditions
    (-i.e. From freezing to boiling)
  • Bacteria Free thanks to Grunge Guard (anti-microbial FDA approved
    technology, which blocks bacteria growth)
  • Extremely Durable: Crack and Puncture Resistant.
  • Twist Top Sport Cap

 

 

For the Host with the Most

Product Name:
           Bamboo Charcoal Filters

Size:
                          
Available in packs of 4, 8 and 12.

Cost:                          
>From £4.00 per pack of 4

 

What’s interesting about it?

Bamboo
charcoal is a simple and natural way of filtering tap water.

§              
Simply leave it in a jug filled with tap water and it will
slowly filter out impurities such as chlorine.

§              
Works like a sponge, absorbing impurities into its pores. It
also mineralises the water during initial usage by slowly releasing minerals
into the water.

§              
Lasts up to 2 months

§              
100 % biodegradable – once they’ve finished filtering, simply
bury them in the garden

 

For the Adventurer (A gap year must-have)

Product
Name:            Aquapure Traveller Bottle by Pure Hydration.

Size:
                          
750ml

Cost:                          
£34.95

 

What’s interesting about it? 

It produces safe, clean, filtered water any time, any place in 15
minutes. 

  • The inbuilt filter will purify 350 Litres of
    water, killing viruses and bacteria and removing nasty stuff like pathogens,
    chemicals, heavy metals, faecal matter, bad tastes & odours
  • It’s the only portable water purifier officially
    endorsed by the Hospital of Tropical Diseases London.
  • Replacement filters available.

 

 

 

For the Passionate Enthusiast 

Product
Name:            Various including SIGG and Nalgene brands

What’s
interesting about it?

Forget Slogan Tee-shirts!  Why not
share your message with the world on your omni-present water bottle instead?

 

Take your pick from messages such as:

§        
Refill Not
Landfill

§        
Simply Eco
Logical

§        
Make Love
Not Landfill

§        
Green is
the New Black

 

 

The individuals behind Reusable
Bottle.co.uk
do their research too; only stocking products from
brands with sound environmental and ethical production methods. 

 

For more information – or to purchase your own reusable bottle – visit www.reusuablebottle.co.uk
or call 05602 696001. 

 

 

- ends -

Notes to Editor:

 

Did you know?

§        
Britons use approximately
13billion plastic bottles (equivalent to 257,000 tons) every year

§        
Only 3billion of
these are recycled, the remaining 10bn end up as landfill

§        
These
landfill-destined plastic bottles would fill Wembley Stadium three times every
12 months

 

Reusable Bottle.co.uk founder, Daniel
Brousson is a dedicated campaigner for plastic alternatives.  He has
already achieved success with the Onya Bags range, a collection of durable,
lightweight bags which fold down into a compact size making it easier than ever
for people to carry them ‘on-ya’ as the brand suggests. 

Combatting Dry Skin

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

For most people moisturizers should be not be necessary because
sufficient oil, secreted from the sebaceous glands in the form of sebum
will attract water from within the body. These compounds then react
with an emulsifier which we naturally produce in the skin, cholesterol,
forming a protective film known as the hydrolipid mantle. Cholesterol
isn’t all bad. This oily mantle in the upper layer of the skin, if you
like, our own personally formulated and produced moisturizing film,
works like a team of night club bouncers by allowing water, toxins and
carbon dioxide to leave the body while keeping water and pathogens from
entering the body and infecting the skin.

Cold press plant oils, such as argan oil, oilve and sesame oil have been the most precious of commodities since trade began.

However in a person with a dry skin type, the hydrolipid mantle of the
skin lacks sufficient oil to bind sufficient water to keep the skin
moist. This may be worse in areas of the skin where there are no oil
glands such as on the lips. Without the proper management dry skin can
look dull flaky and cracked, and feel uncomfortable, itchy and tight.
Dry skin is less able to perform its protective functions and as the
structure deteriorates, the skin becomes more prone to sensitivity,
allergic reactions, infections and premature aging. Like you wanted to
hear that bit!
.
Dietary factors almost certainly play a role in the quality of our
skin, as the water and oil present in our skins should originally find
its way in our body as food. Certain vitamins, minerals and oils are
essential for healthy skin. The skin likes it when we eat Vitamins A,
B5, C, E, F; the minerals zinc, copper, sulphur; essential fatty acids;
and various other oily compounds from the plant kingdom.
.
It is best if we can obtain the nutrients through our diet, but if no
balance can be obtained between diet and any environmental factors
which disturb the hydroliphic mantle of the skin – our frequent hand
washing and use of oil stripping detergents, it is necessary to apply
oil from the outside. The ancient civilizations in Egypt, Sumeria,
Babylon, Crete, China, and later the Greeks and Romans always used cold
pressed vegetable oils, but nowadays using oil seems to be the
exception. Oil use continues across Arabia and India, well and pretty
much where ever oil bearing plants and humans are found on the planet.
Luckily, if the diet does not contain sufficient oil, cold pressed
plant oil can supply the skin with crucial oil compounds, helping the
skin to build its natural protective film.
.
Moisturizers were only mass produced at the beginning of the last
century after scientists had begun synthesizing oils with long names in
laboratories, often using base ingredients we would not normally put on
the skin such as petroleum oil, pig fat, lard, fish and whale oil.
Scientists also had to get busy and synthesize emulsifiers and
preservatives too, because most commercial moisturizers, besides
containing synthetic oil and water, will have to contain these too. The
emulsifiers enable the oil and water to bind together, and as soon as
water is added to a cosmetic, preservatives become necessary.
.
Cold pressed plant oils contain their own natural preservatives. Nearly
all of the emulsifiers and preservatives used in commercial cosmetics
are artificial. Moisturizers contain water in order to add water from
the outside of the skin, but the hydolipid mantle while allowing water
and water soluble toxins out of the body, will not let water in. I am
glad about that, because if I went for a long soak in the bath, I might
end up the shape and consistency of a water balloon. The water in
moisturizer evaporates and doesn’t penetrate the skin. The skin uses
water from the inside the body.
.
After the widespread adoption of commercial soap and the more recently
acquired habit of showering or bathing in hot chlorinated water
everyday, the moisturizer industry took off. Many people have
subsequently forgotten about the virtues of oil for reducing dry skin.
Yet all across the world in rural areas, households are equipped with
mill stones and women proudly make their own oil. I am currently
keeping an eye on my olive tree, but it is only three feet tall!
.
Tips for managing a dry skin
.
1/ Exfoliate the layers of dead skin. It is impossible to
moisturize dead, flaky skin. Use exfoliating soap such as savon noir to
make the exfoliation more effective.
2/ Introduce strip washing as the primary washing method, showering or
bathing once a week. The idea here is to retain your natural oils and
to reduce your exposure to chlorine, known to dry skin.
3/ Reduce the temperature of the water used in washing. It is best to
wash the face with cold water. Yes, I thought you’d like that one!
4/ Replace conventional soap with rhassoul clay. Spend longer massaging
very dry areas of skin with clay while washing. This really does make a
huge difference.
5/ Try using a cold pressed natural vegetable oil, also called a
carrier or base oil rather than a moisturizer on the body. Experiment
with different oils until you find one you like. Begin with oils that
you would accept as food ingredients, i.e. ones which are still named
after the plants they are made from. Oils rich in linoleic acid (a
compound found in natural plant oils) are very beneficial for dry skins
and they include safflower oil, sunflower oil, wheat germ oil or argan
oil. A cold pressed plant oil is rich in vitamins, some of which act as powerful antioxidants. Then there are the essential fatty acids
which we can not make in the body. The level of moisturization of the
skin is directly proportional to the levels of essential fatty acids in
the skin. Plant oils also contain unsaturated oils which are anti-microbial helping to prevent common skin infections and components called unsaponifiables, so called because these fats can not be used for making soap. These are the super antioxidants.
6/ If you must use a formulated moisturizer, choose one which contains
natural oils over synthetic oils. Synthetic oils have really long
unpronounceable names and don’t sound very appetizing. Avoid skin
products containing petroleum, mineral oil, liquid paraffin, Parafinnum
liquidum, these are all the same thing. Petroleum oil is cheap
ingredient, a by product of the petrol refining industry. The skin can
not assimilate petroleum oil. This oil is widespread in baby products
(baby oil), moisturizers, lip moisturizers and it is even fed to cats
to help with fur ball problems. Brushing the cat is the kindest way to
help it make fur balls. Petroleum oil produces a temporary moisturising
effect, however prolonged contact is implicated in destroying the
natural oily barrier of the skin, in destroying the vitamins needed by
the skin, and guess what, in causing dryness and rashes. I think I had
one once around my mouth. Petroleum oil can be contaminated with
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), some of which are potential
human carcinogens. If you really can’t contemplate the switch from
moisturizer to oil, then try making your own moisturizer with a plant
oil! Keep anything oily in glass bottle or jar, as oils will leach
plastic.
7/ Moisturize face, neck and hands with a well absorbing oil as often
as necessary. Argan oil is the finest and fastest absorbing oil of
which I know and the highest in antioxidants. Clicking here will give you a chance to read more about argan oil and to purchase some.
New moisturizers are hitting the shops everyday, often with dubious,
untraceable and partially tested ingredients. Humans have had thousands
of years to work out which how best to hydrate the skin with oils.
Among the Phoenicians, the sea traders from the Bronze Age, (active
from about 3200 years ago) there was a booming trade through the
Moroccan port of Essaouira in precious argan oil and urns of olive and
sesame oil were rowed and sailed all over the Mediterranean.
8/ Investigate how dietary improvements such a Palaeolithic, raw food,
macro-biotic, vegetarian, vegan or alkaline diets can provide nutrients
essential for healthy skin. Or just eat your normal diet with oily fish
twice a week, walnuts and other foods rich in healthy oils being sure
to obtain the right balance of omega fats. Reducing exposure to
alcohol, smoking, sugar and refined foods will help. It would help me
too!
9/ Protect your hands from water, detergents and soaps. Once the
natural sebum is stripped it takes the skin between 5 and 8 hours to
naturally restore the hydrolipic balance. Luckily, the skin has the
good sense to accept cold pressed plant oils when they are applied
externally and put them to good use. Become an expert in using your
chosen oil. Work out the minimum you need and when best to apply it.
For example if you apply to much moisturizer or oil on the face at
night, then the skin will have trouble getting rid of water and the
skin under the eyes will appear puffy in the morning, inversely if you
apply less than you need, then the skin will still feel taught in the
morning. It’s a question of finding the right balance and only you can
work it out. Most people prefer a fine (very free flowing oil) which
can be rapidly absorbed by the skin and one which agrees well with the
facial skin, whether using make up or not.
10/ Before putting anything on your skin or anyone else’s skin, get out
your magnifying glass and read the label. If it contains a long list of
chemical ingredients think twice before using it. Nearly one half of
the emulsifiers used in conventional cosmetics have caused skin
reactions, and many of the preservatives used in conventional
moisturizers have been reported as carcinogens. Be aware that chemical
products don’t just pollute the bodies of humans, but they also end up
in the water sources and indirectly contaminate the planet. Vegetable
oils will quite happily biodegrade.
.
What is clear is that before the use of moisturizer, oil was used for
skin care. Millstones, necessary for oil production appeared during the
Neolithic period, when agriculture took off about 9000 years ago. Oil
rich seeds might need milling for eight hours before a single litre of
oil is expressed. Oil production, even involving a millstone is a very
labour intensive. Hand milling was the in thing until machine presses
were invented several hundred years ago, and still much oil production
around the world is conducted at the household level using a stone
mill. Oils could in theory be made with a more basic pestle and mortar
type tool kit, but again, it would have been even more work, so if oils
were produced before the Neolithic, then it must have been in very
small quantities for more or less immediate use. Earlier than this, it
would seem more likely that the whole of the oil bearing seed of the
plant part would have been pulverized and used rubbed on the skin, but
it could be a little inconvenient for some of us today if we do not
have our own gathering range. Primates extract their own plant oils
directly by rubbing their skin against the plant source. Certainly
through much of the Ice Age, the population must also have made use of
animal fat such as goose fat, as much as for insulation and water
proofing as well as for keeping the skin supple. While this would
impose difficulties for the majority of us city dwellers, we can be
grateful that cold pressed plant oil also comes in bottles.

Further resources
The Cosmetics Safety Data Base provides a search feature on the toxicity of common cosmetics ingredients.
Smeh, Nikolaus, 1994, Health Risks in Today’s Cosmetics: The handbook for a lifetime of healthy skin and hair, Alliance, VA

Smart City Futures Day 3: The New Conversation – The Lowry, Salford, 23rd July

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

A REGIONAL EVENT WITH INTERNATIONAL REACH
As ministers abandon plans to publish a community empowerment bill, Smart City Futures will give those communities a voice! It will bring together Global leaders from business, policy and research for a desperately needed, honest and open conversation about connectivity, collaboration and community empowerment.

WHO WILL BE THERE?

 High Level International Speakers Include:

Melissa Sterry                 CEO, Societás, UK
Prof Takeda Shuzaburo    Exec Director, Business Universities Forum, Tokyo
Veli-Pekka Niitamo          Research Director, NOKIA IT Living Labs, Netherlands
Prof Paul James              Director Global Cities, RMIT, Melbourne
Lesley Gavin                  BT’s first female futurologist, UK
Prof Carolyn Kagan         Psychology and Social Change, MMU, UK

WHAT and WHY?
A lack of transparency and a silo mentality is resulting in a global political, environmental and economic meltdown
Open,
honest debate and knowledge sharing will help global communities to
climb out of these economically and environmentally challenged times
Smart
City Futures will provide an honest, open forum that will break down
the walls between policy makers, industry leaders, Universities and the
communities they serve. Together they will explore open innovation and
talk about how to build the foundations for a more sustainable future
Day
3 of Smart City Futures, designed by Just-b. Productions, will bring
b.TWEEN magic into the mix to pull crucial conversations into the 21st
century at this landmark forum
Using web 2.0 technologies, this
innovative event will show how Universities can walk the walk and act
as catalysts for change. Smart City Futures will give communities a
voice and a chance to interact in real time with global leaders

All speakers will be able to answer unmoderated questions in this rare chance to talk directly and honestly about our future

NEW CHALLENGES CALL FOR NEW SOLUTIONS: What makes SCF different?

This
event will be packed with installations, conversations, workshops,
brainstorms and one to ones. Moving away from traditional formats,
technologies will invite participation and interaction throughout.
Sessions will look at a range of thought provoking topics and themes
such as:

Professional Futures: Innovation and Collaboration in the Professional realms;
Policy Futures: Towards a Framework for Sustainable Economies;
Community Futures: Empowering Communities

Nature Sense offer 50% off Oregon Grape tincture for eczema and psoriasis

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Suffering from dry eczema itchy skin or psoriasis? Try
the Oregon Grape Tincture. It’s a natural herbal remedy that is made
especially for treating skin diseases. Nature Sense have a promotion on at the
moment - 50% off the original price!

Oregon Grape is a bitter, astringent, decongestant herb that
stimulates bile flow and releases toxins. Interally for skin diseases
(especially dry eczema), gall bladder complaints, chronic hepatitis B,
catarrhal gastritis, and diarrhea. The Oregan Grape tincture has much
better desired effect on eczema and psoriasis if used combined with Oregon Grape ointment.

Oregon grape is an evergreen shrub found growing throughout the
American northwest. While this plant is not actually a grape plant, it
is grown in Oregon. Oregon grape is a close relative of the barberry
plant and has many common medicinal uses and constituents.

It is a very special herb that has been put together in the simple form of tincture and ointment.

Ingredients:

Wild – crafted Mahonia aquifolium (Oregon Grape) tincture1:2 w/v (dried) in 45% organic ethanol

Extra Information:

A new range of Tinctures made by Paul
Richards who has been growing medicinal plants for nearly 20 years. The
herbs are grown organically in the beautiful Welsh border country of
West Herefordshire. Herbs are harvested in peak condition, carefully
chopped, and infused in organic grain alcohol. He puts 1kg of herb in
1.33 litres of alcohol is the maximum concentration normally 

Half price offer ends on 30th June 2009. is extended to 10th July 2009

When did you last disinfect your tissue paper?

Friday, June 5th, 2009

When did you last disinfect your tissue paper?

Since
the start of this ’swine flu’ scare, there has been an increase in the
government-sponsored advertising with the slogan ‘Catch it. Bin it.
Kill it’.

Well, it has certainly killed much of
my hankie business which is usually in full flow this time of year, it
being hayfever season. And you know what is even more exasperating?
They are using MY tax money to bring you this advertising, effectively ruining my business.

This
admonition to ‘bin it’ suggests that disposable tissue paper is more
hygienic than cloth hankies. One school website says explicitly that
cloth hankies are to be avoided. But when was the last time you
disinfected a piece of tissue paper?

So, being the researcher
that I am I took a closer look at my internet search results for ’swine
flu and hankie’. Here are some of my conclusions:…

(1) The habit
of covering one’s mouth with a hankie or tissue when one sneezes or
coughs is no longer a habit amongst some of the younger people in this
country. One writer complained about a mother letting her young child
cough and sneeze and letting the outflow of solids and liquids spray
all around the train carriage they were sharing, with no sign of guilt
or remorse.

Another reported how a hoodie stood next to him at a
traffic junction and started emptying the contents of his nasal
passages onto the streets, and not always hitting the target.

Yet another suggested that “[s]urely the idea of people covering their mouths when they cough or sneeze is commonsensical, and a mannerly thing we should all learn from an early age”.

(2)
It is therefore a question of ‘catch it’ in the first place. The
emphasis on paper tissue is misplaced, a sign that this campaign was
probably designed by young people who do not know what a handkerchief
is.

Compare the current campaign to this World War II poster above:

Then, when tissue paper was non-existent, a cloth handkerchief did the job.

(3) Cloth hankies are still doing the job.

My husband is immunocompromised. He only uses hankies.

I suffer from hayfever. I use cloth hankies. Swopped back from tissue paper some years ago.

My
son only uses cloth hankies. He loves the ones with his name
embroidered in very large letters so no one throws them away … again.
(We suspect that some of his hankies had gone missing because other
children did not realize that it was ‘lost property’ and not a funny
kind of stretchy tissue to be put in the bin.)

My son also has one of the best attendance records in class, better than those who use only tissue paper.

(4)
Sure, we put our used hankies back in our pockets. Some people say,
“Yuck! Keeping all those bacteria in your pocket can’t be good.” But at
least we keep our own bacteria to ourselves.

There is a Chinese saying: disease enters through one’s mouth. Conversely, what comes out of us can’t kill us. Might kill someone else, but not us. And that is the point: we must use a hankie to cover our mouth when we sneeze in order not to infect other people.

We wash our hankies. We dry them in the sun. We iron them. We are effectively killing any bacteria that might still be lurking.

When did you last disinfect a paper tissue?

Wash tissue paper? Yes, done that many times, by accident. They always end up in bits and stick to your dark colour clothes.

Dry them? They always end up in a hardened glob, does it not, in a bin or wherever?

Iron tissue paper? Never.

(5)
Used tissue paper left in open bins which might not be emptied for
several days = bacteria to share with all and sundry. Surely this is
even more “Yuck”.

In summary then, I suspect that the NHS
campaign is targetted at people who do not use either tissue paper or
cloth hankies in the first place. To suggest that paper is better than
cloth is misplaced.

I wonder if my accountant could claim some
money back from the revenue people for ruining my business. Or should I
bring a case to the advertising complaints/standards folk? Anyone out
there with expert advice for me?

Covers Family Fun Day 6th June 2009

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009


Eco Ezee will have a stand
with our paint trays at the Covers Family Fun Day on Saturday 6th
June 2009 from 10am – 2pm in Chichester.

Come meet the team and see
our paint trays in person.

Location: Covers Head
Office Depot, Quarry Lane, Chichester

HOPE
TO SEE YOU THERE

Discover your inner beauty

Friday, May 29th, 2009

‘Ethical Nutriceuticals’
Fushi a leading ethical health and beauty brand introduces a pioneering nutriceutical range that targets five most
common health concerns; skin repair, energy, stress,detox and anti-aging.

Termed as the ‘honest’ supplement, Fushi’s nutriceuticals come completely free from added fillers, bulking agents, and nasties that many mainstream brands often tend to use. They are vegetarian friendly and professionally formulated with 100 % pure ingredients in bio available form for the best absorption.

An ethically accredited brand and environmentally conscious, Fushi embarks on a ‘tree for eternity’ project ensuring a portion of the profits goes towards planting of more trees in the UK and abroad. This is to inspire customers to ‘consume with a conscience’.

Youth Totale Superfood
This potent certified organic formulation contains 10 Superfoods perfect to add to your favourite juice or smoothie. The unique blend including Spirulina, Kelp and Bilberry and is great to include in your anti-ageing regime, to maintain good health and as a potent anti-ageing food supplement.
RRP: £9.95 10 x 10g sachets

Beauty Totale
A unique complex with 24 essential nutrients, Beauty Totale has been designed to penetrate cells at a deep level to promote a radiant complexion, healthy hair and nails. It contains the key essential nutrients Alpha-lipoic acid, biotin and silica, to ensure glowing results within weeks.
RRP: £14.95 60 caps

Calmaid
As the name suggests Calmaid is a calming formula to promote a zen like feeling to the body. The essential nutrients L-tryptophan, inositol and magnesium help to promote mental calm and nourish the nervous system particularly in times of stress. It also contains individual amino acids that help regulate mood and the sleep wake cycle. Perfect for stressful lifestyles no doubt.
RRP 9.95 60 caps

Energiplex
A pioneering formula for energy, Energiplex offers a caffeine free alternative to boost energy levels and create a zestful feeling in the body. Combining Alpha-lipoic acid, L-carnitine and B group vitamins the formula ensures optimum energy levels and is particularly formulated for people with busy and active lifestyles.
RRP: £9.95 60 caps

Detoxipure
This advanced natural formula has been designed to help cleanse toxins and pollutants that come from modern living. Rhubarb root, L-glutamine and L-methionine combined with other essential nutrients work to repair and regenerate the liver and digestive function and is the perfect supplement to combine with a detox programme.
RRP: £14.95 60 caps

Available at www.fushi.co.uk and selected healthfood
stores and pharmacies nationwide.


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