Entries Tagged as 'Body Treatments'

Body Benefits Save $50

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Body BeneFits, Inc.
(formerly known as Endermologie Center of the Woodlands)
9191 Pinecroft, Suite 100
The Woodlands, Texas 77380
281. 292.8882
 
SmoothShapes Laser Cellulite Reduction Treatments Now Available at Body BeneFits in The Woodlands, Texas
 
Body BeneFits has been specializing in cellulite reduction treatments since 2000 and are the only Houston or Woodlands, Texas location to offer the latest technology from Eleme’ Medical called SmoothShapes.
 
SmoothShapes has a patented technology called Photomology which provides multiple technologies for treatment of cellulite and fat liquification. This has been shown on The View, Today’s Show NY, Oprah’s O magazine and the Mike & Juliet Show in the morning.
 
Receive a first time discount of $50.00 off your first treatment for mentioning Spavelous.com.

Slender Smith’s Day Spa & Salon Destin FL

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This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com.

 http://www.spavelous.com

 

Ginger Smith gets a wrap on global business

For this episode of Word on the Street, we present the tale of a young woman from Niceville who has found a unique niche in the realm of global biz.
And yes, Ginger Smith of Slender Smith’s Day Spa & Salon has truly gone global.
Smith graduated from Niceville High School in 1999. Her mother, Sally Smith, was Miss Vermont in 1978 and a professional model for almost 10 years. They’re partners in Slender Smith’s on Airport Road in Destin.
But what really has launched Ginger Smith is her connection with Suddenly Slender. This company was founded by Victoria Morton, who invented a mineral body wrap in 1969 and who markets it globally today from Clearwater.
Before we go any further: Not an herbal body wrap. No, this involves “inorganic food grade minerals” (iron, potassium and magnesium are examples) and distilled water. It also involves wrapping yourself in elastic bandages and sitting in a dry sauna.

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Morton told us last week that her company has sold nearly 12 million of these wraps. The Body Wrap is delivered throughout the United States, Canada, the Caribbean, South America, Europe and the Middle East.

Find a Suddenly Slender Spa

“It becomes a lifestyle for people,” Morton said.

She added that the best results are done through a series of wraps that eventually gives way to maintenance visits.

Ginger Smith received her basic license from Suddenly Slender in 1998. She started teaching and training with the company seven years ago. Three years ago, she said she started working on celebrity clients and last year she helped movie stars prepare for the Academy Awards show.

“Ginger is successful because she has always been passionate about helping people,” Morton said. “And from the very first day she was in training class, her focus was about taking the best qualities of every person and maximizing them. We have a saying, ‘We’ll change your body, change your mind, change your life,’ and Ginger is the real deal.”

Smith recently returned from Saudi Arabia, where she was providing her service to the royal family. Princess Fahda Bandar Al-Saud owns all the Suddenly Slender franchises in the Mideast and has invited Smith back in about six weeks.

“It was the best experience of my entire life,” Smith said. “I am hoping to bring the royal family here to vacation and eventually persuade them to purchase vacation homes in the future.”

Since her return, Smith has worked to prepare Jennifer Bennett from Niceville for her competition in the Mrs. America pageant in Daytona Beach this weekend. We’ll update you on that in the near future.

“I never thought that body wraps were going to be so popular,” Smith said in summing up her rise to becoming a global businesswoman. “I work hard and love what I do, and by the grace of God I’m here.”

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Body Coffee introduces New Hydrating Body Wrap

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This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com. http://www.spavelous.com

Welcome to the New Hydrating Body Wrap Treatment!

It is with great pleasure that we introduce the New Hydrating Body Wrap to our signature spa therapy collection. Experience true luxury with our sumptuous 3-step spa treatment as you restore inner balance while nourishing outer beauty.

The New Hydrating Body Wrap Treatment is sheer poetry for your spirit! It truly is an essential, self-indulgent reward for your body.

Step One

Espresso Citron Naturally Foaming Body Exfoliant

This gentle, naturally foaming exfoliant is made from finely milled organic espresso. Combined with vibrant citrus oils, the Espresso Citron Naturally Foaming Body Exfoliant smoothes and softens skin.

Step Two

Coffee Orchid Hydrating Body Serum

After your full body exfoliation, slip into a silky cocoon of moisturizing wild orchid extract and powerful antioxidants which envelop your body from head to toe. Like a radiant butterfly you will blossom with your natural defenses renewed and revitalized.

Step Three

Jasmine Java Nourishing Body Crème

Your luxurious experience culminates as your body is massaged and replenished with a decadent Crème of coffee, cocoa, and Shea butter infused with exotic jasmine and organic ylang-ylang. You emerge revived, refreshed, lucid and lyrical.

The New Hydrating Body Wrap Treatment is a perfect complement to any spa menu.

As a special promotion, we are offering spas 15% off all products through June 15th, 2008. Mention this email to receive your discount

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Featured Caffeinated Spa Treatments:

Medical Spa - Safety Concerns Results in State Changes

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Medical spa rules to get a makeover

Bill would toughen penalties against absentee oversight

Sherry Deppermann spent two months reading up on a new, state-of-the art form of liposuction. And after identifying a local medical spa that offered it, she checked with the state medical board to see whether the doctors in charge had ever been disciplined.

Dr. Jason Helliwell prepares a patient’s abdomen prior to using a YAG (yttrium aluminium garnet) laser at the Advanced Women’s Health Center he runs with his wife, Dr. Siniva Kaneen, in Bakersfield. The laser is used in conjunction with a solution that numbs and melts the patient’s fat cells.

Dr. Jason Helliwell shines a YAG (yttrium aluminium garnet) laser on the palm of his surgical glove at the Advanced Women’s Health Center he runs with his wife, Dr. Siniva Kaneen, in Bakersfield. The laser is used in conjunction with a solution that numbs and melts the patient’s fat cells.

“I’m a nurse, so I probably did more research than most people,” she said. “I think there are a lot of people out there who shouldn’t be doing these procedures, and most clients don’t know who’s going to be working on them and what their training is.”

Deppermann’s diligence is unusual, but officials say it’s a good idea since a loophole in state law has led to alleged abuses at some medical spas.

A QUESTION OF OVERSIGHT

In California, as in many states, a licensed physician or surgeon must be the majority owner of a medical spa. The law even requires minority stake holders to work in a health-related field.

But under current rules, the doctor in charge need not be present when a medical spa is performing certain services. They merely must be “reachable” during the procedure, said Candis Cohen, a spokeswoman for the Medical Board of California.

As a result, some medical spas have physician oversight on paper, but the doctors in charge spend little or no time in the offices. Lawmakers in several states are addressing this safety concern.

A bill pending in the California legislature would strengthen penalties against such absentee oversight. Introduced by Alan Nakanishi, R-Lodi, Assembly Bill 2398 would expand penalties — which are now usually fines — to include license revocation.

The bill also would give an attorney general the option of filing criminal charges. Currently, any discipline is the sole jurisdiction of the state medical board.

But attorney David Shane says failing to require the supervising doctor’s presence at the medical spa means the bill doesn’t go far enough.

The physician’s name “lends an aura of respectability, but in reality, it’s misleading” if the doctor isn’t there, he said.

“What does ‘reachable’ mean, exactly?” he said. “In this day and age, everyone’s reachable if they have e-mail or a cell phone.

“That’s such a big loophole that it doesn’t really provide the care that consumers expect.”

Shane represents a 57-year-old Mill Valley man who is suing The Laser Center of Marin. His client alleges his skin became so hypersensitive to light after a botched laser hair removal treatment that he now suffers severe pain in the sun. There was no doctor at the facility to handle the complications of the treatment, Shane said, and the injury seems to be permanent.

The patient, Dom Martin, declined to comment and The Laser Center of Marin could not be reached late Friday.

MEDICAL SPAS COMING AROUND

The bill’s proposed changes to the Business and Professions Code regulating the state’s medical facilities has yet to win broad support from the medical spa industry.

“A lot of this is dermatologists and plastic surgeons trying to corner the market on medical spas because they don’t like the competition,” said Hannelore Leavy, executive director of International Medical Spa Association. “Some states are trying to restrict ownership to certain kinds of doctors, but if the person is properly licensed and trained, there’s no reason why they can’t perform these services.”

The association hopes to reduce the need for new laws by developing a national accreditation for medical spas, Leavy said. They hope the new system will be implemented in the next year or two, she said.

But Dr. M. Christine Lee, who is lobbying for the bill’s passage through a trade organization, says a lot of “misinformation” about the bill has “scared medical spa owners.”

“What opponents don’t realize is this doesn’t create a new law, it just increases the ability to enforce existing law,” said Lee, who runs a medical spa in Walnut Creek and teaches dermatologic surgery at the University of California, San Francisco.

That was enough to sway Jina Pappas, a nurse practitioner who runs Aescala Skin Care, a cosmetic division that High Grove Medical Center opened more than three years ago in its downtown building.

“I do agree that doctors should be accessible and aware of what’s happening at medical spas,” she said. “Some of these treatments are serious medical procedures. I do a lot of laser tattoo removals, and they work by burning off the skin, so it heals like a burn.”

Bakersfield’s Dr. Jason Helliwell has already seen the benefits of close oversight.

“We used to offer our cosmetic and clinical services in two different locations, but we consolidated them at a new building in April,” he said. “It was for both safety and convenience.”

Helliwell co-owns Advanced Women’s Health Center on Brimhall Road with his wife, fellow OB/GYN Dr. Siniva Kaneen. About 20 percent of their clinic’s work is now cosmetic services such as the Smart Lipo he performed Friday on Deppermann, he said.

“My wife and I do all the Smart Lipo ourselves, and we use an R.N. (registered nurse) and physician assistant who are specially trained for the Botox injections and laser treatments and things like that that aren’t surgical,” he said. “But if anything goes wrong, we’re right down the hall, which makes me a lot more comfortable.”

SAFETY TIPS

Candis Cohen, spokeswoman for the Medical Board of California, says prospective patients should:

Find out the name of the medical spa’s director and check to see if the Medical Board of California has disciplined that person before undergoing treatment.

Find out who will be actually performing the treatment, and check that person for any disciplinary actions on their record. Also investigate their background and training, including how many times they have performed the procedure.

The medical board can also tell you which types of aestheticians, therapists and health care practitioners are licensed to administer a given treatment.

Visit before the procedure, if possible, and look around. Is it clean? Does it look sterile?

Trust your gut. If you’re not totally and completely satisfied with the answers to your questions, go somewhere else.

To check discipline records, call 800-633-2322 or see records online Note that the Web site doesn’t list pending complaints.

Full Article

Murad - Leader in Skin Care Science
Where skinkcare meets healthcare.
Get glowing luminous skin year-round.

Fresh & fruit using eco-friendly exfoliation products at spas

 

After Laura Noss signed up to receive a weekly organic produce box from a farm near her home in Menlo Park, Calif., she decided that fruits and vegetables grown close to home taste better.

“It has opened my eyes to what is local and seasonal,” Ms. Noss said. “I now understand that what I put in my body and on my body matters.”

So she began looking for ways to go local beyond the palate. Last year, while she planned a getaway to Maui, she hunted for treatments that used indigenous ingredients at the Grand Wailea Resort Hotel and Spa. That is how she found herself being scrubbed with locally-sourced coconut and sugar, then dunked in just-harvested coconut milk — for $160 a treatment.

“It felt like it would be fresher than some of the other treatments,” said Ms. Noss, 38, the founder of Social Planets, a communications and marketing company. “I envisioned the woman going out to the tree and plucking my coconut.”

More than 28 percent of spas nationwide use local ingredients, according to a 2007 survey by the International Spa Association, a trade group for the industry. Last year, after seeing the trend take off, the association started tracking how many of the 3,000 spas in its membership use ingredients from local nature in treatments.

In an age of global warming and high gas prices, is it any wonder that more spa-goers are gravitating to blueberries, honey and even maple syrup, cultivated close by because they believe it leaves a lighter carbon footprint?

The local-food movement, popularized by writers like Michael Pollan and Barbara Kingsolver, has created an aura of authenticity around all things local. Forward-thinking spas have long included indigenous ingredients on their menus, but more spa owners have entered the game of late, now that customers will pay more for services they deem environmentally responsible.

Some spas use the local produce in unexpected ways. The Cliff House Resort and Spa in Ogunquit, Me., offers its guests a Maine blueberry body wrap for $110. You can also get a Maine Blueberry Pedicure.

That more businesses (spas included) are rushing to make greenbacks off the green-minded hasn’t escaped the notice of Jessica Jensen, a founder of Low Impact Living, an online resource that helps consumers live eco-friendly.

“There are two kinds of companies,” Ms. Jensen said, “ones that are genuinely dedicated to these issues and incorporate them into every aspect of their business, and then other companies trying to put a varnish on their business in the form of putting a few green techniques here and there.”

Some critics say that marketing — not any environmental impulse per se — is the reason local ingredients are touted at spas from the Napa Valley to the Maine Coast.

“Putting the label ‘organic’ or ‘local’ on a product allows a vendor to charge more, irregardless of supply and demand,” said James E. McWilliams, the author of “A Revolution in Eating: How the Quest for Food Shaped America.” “There is a psychological factor at work here as well. When a company can claim they are going local, it conveys a sense of virtue, that what they are doing is natural and pure, and that their behavior is alternative and even elite. These are values that a lot of consumers today crave.”

Heather Stephenson, 34, favors buying local wherever she travels, as well as in San Francisco, her base. “One of the best things you can do in terms of the planet is to seek out things that are sourced close to home,” said Ms. Stephenson, a founder of Ideal Bite, a Web site about ways to go green. Her body has been polished from regional grape seeds at Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn and Spa in California, exfoliated with Javanese coffee in Bali, and massaged with volcanic rocks from Costa Rica.

Some green advocates question whether such destination-spa treatments, however carefully sourced, are eco-friendly at all. “Using local materials in a spa setting is a great idea,” said Ms. Jensen of Low Impact Living. “But it’s kind of silly when you think about the carbon emissions associated with people flying 3,000 miles to get to the spa, versus the supposed savings using local materials, wraps and lotion.”

Ms. Stephenson, who visits roughly five spas a year, doesn’t see a contradiction. “The fact is that people go on a vacation,” she said. “We can do that in a way that gives us a healthy experience for ourselves, but also wakes us up to experiencing the things that that culture provides, and gives us an appreciation for the natural world.”

Home-grown experiences are part of what destination spas sell. The spa at Stoweflake Mountain Resort in Stowe, Vt., offers a Vermont Maple Sugar Body Polish using local maple syrup. Tell a tale of a land or its people, and patrons will come — many spas hope.

Sometimes a marketable idea is discovered where it’s least expected. During construction at the Sundara Inn and Spa in Wisconsin Dells, Wis., the former owner, Kelli Trumble, lamented how she had sand in everything, said Tara Duarte, the director of operations at Sundara, including “every pair of shoes and boots and all over her car.”

“Yet, the sand was a pretty mix of reds and golds,” Ms. Duarte added, “and it had such an even consistency that she thought it was the sort of thing you’d find in body polishes.”

So Ms. Trumble put some sandstone into a baggie and had it analyzed at a lab. When it turned out to be sandstone of an ancient Cambrian variety, Sandstone Body Polishes soon appeared at the spa.

Designing signature services based around local ingredients sets spas apart from the competition, said Melinda Taschetta-Millane, the editor in chief of Skin Inc. magazine, a trade publication for spa professionals. “They find that if they use one of these indigenous ingredients, it helps their identity and gives their spa a distinctive mark.”

Competition is fierce with roughly 14,615 spas nationwide, up from 10,128 in 2004, according to the spa association.

As a result, spas are concocting increasingly offbeat (some might say outlandish) offerings, looking to nearby vineyards, deserts and rock formations for ingredients to slather, spritz and rub onto willing bodies.

ESSpa Kozmetika, a spa near downtown Pittsburgh, doles out hot chocolate, brownies and dark-chocolate samples in the waiting room to draw attention to its $140 Stimulating Hot Cocoa Facial and $140 Hot Chocolate Body Wrap. (What the spa doesn’t advertise is that although it gets its chocolate from a local ice cream shop, the cocoa beans are from Africa.)

Customers who choose the Rosemary and Grape Seed Foot Scrub at the spa at Auberge du Soleil in Napa Valley are greeted with a glass of 2002 Barlow merlot and tasting notes: “The balanced fruit with subtle earth and herbal notes in the merlot are wonderfully brought to life by the complementary aromatics of grape seeds and rosemary in the foot treatment.”

Spa-goers shouldn’t assume that locals have traditionally given themselves facials or wrapped their limbs in, say, a blueberry mash just because a treatment’s star ingredient is indigenous. “The Hawaiians didn’t really do a papaya scrub, although you do have papaya in Hawaii,” said Sylvia Sepielli, the owner of Sylvia Planning and Design, a spa design and consulting firm in Sedona, Ariz. In her opinion, spas that try to connect their treatments to “local healing culture” are misleading.

It is possible that discovering local ingredients at a spa will have an impact on a person’s behavior once they return home, Mr. McWilliams said.

“Maybe ‘green lite’ will turn into ‘green heavy,’ ” he said. “But the most environmentally-friendly thing we can do is reduce our consumer spending dramatically, and a spa is a dramatic luxury expense.”

Full Article

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Give Your Business A Lift - Aveda

 

Facial services are the #2 revenue generator for Spa’s

Aging concerns are the #1 reason guests visit the Spa/Salon

Age treatment is the leading and fastest growing category in professional skincare

  • +88% over past 5 years
  • Projected to grow +34.5% to $2.4 billion over next 5 years

Green Science is clinically proven to perform in 4 weeks*

  • 41% more lifted appearance
  • 37% reduction in the appearance of lines and wrinkles

*Based on clinical testing of the 4-step Green Science™ Skin care system.

Find your balance with the new Chakra Balancing Massage

Grounded in Ayurveda—the Ancient healing art of India, this innovative treatment focuses on the centering of the chakras using a variety of massage techniques. They include deep tissue massage on the back and spinal muscles, chakra reflexology massage for the feet, and energy work for each of the chakras.

  • Massage is the most requested and profitable service in the Spa
  • As proven through the Aveda ABC technology, the new Chakra Balancing Massage combined with the Chakra Balancing Blends will help restore energy flow throughout the body
  • Spa goers are increasingly looking for a physical and spiritual holistic wellness experience that goes beyond the traditional pampering to find their inner balance
  • Through the practice of yoga the general audience is becoming more and more familiar with the healing powers of Ayurvedic medicine (”Ayurveda in America” by Francis C Assisi)

Alvea Spa & Athletic Club - Peoria AZ - Relief for Muscle Pain

 

Alvea Spa & Athletic Club is inviting people interested in easing muscle pain or improving their skin to experience the healing qualities of Photo-Dynamic Therapy and Light Emitting Diodes. Daniel Schell, inventor of the APLightsource 2000, will be demonstrating this safe, low-level light system designed to stimulate cellular energy and repair damaged skin. The event will include tours of the spa facilities.

 

1-4 p.m., Monday, May 12

 

Alvea Spa & Athletic Club

Trilogy at Vistancia

27980 N. Trilogy Blvd., Peoria, AZ 85383

(623) 215-6290

Personal Genetic Health Helps you to Age Better - Now in Spas

Know Your Personal Genetic Health to Age Better Now!

With National DNA Day on April 25th, Suracell Inc. urges Americans to use their genes to promote healthy aging


At the local drug store, do you stock up on everything touted as “good for you?” Convinced there’s nothing you can do to improve the way you age? Think again, says Suracell, Inc., the pioneer in personal genetic health. With National DNA Day on April 25, Suracell is urging Americans to be proactive about their genetic legacy. By discovering your personal genetic health (PGH) profile through physician-supervised DNA testing, a nutritional supplement and lifestyle plan can be customized specifically for you, so you are not a passive victim of genetic inheritance.


“In today’s world, you take your car to the mechanic, he plugs it into his computer and has enough information to know what’s wrong and how to fix it. DNA testing provides that same window into your body’s health, allowing a medical professional to know how to help you strengthen your genetic make-up,” says Vincent Giampapa, MD, founder of Suracell, renowned anti-aging physician, plastic surgeon and author of five books including the newly released, “The Gene Makeover: The 21st Century Anti-Aging Breakthrough.”

Suracell wants the public to know we can now age better than our predecessors. The company is the first to create a physician-supervised, DNA test available only through a medical, health or wellness center affiliated with Suracell. The test utilizes cheek swab samples and biomarkers that are sent to certified testing laboratories where your Personal Genetic Health (PGH) profile is determined. Once your results are sent back to Suracell, they are reviewed by medical professionals, along with findings from your lifestyle questionnaire. The team evaluates how efficiently your body handles the five key biological processes critical to healthy aging:

– Blood sugar control — Inflammation control — Protection from oxidative stress and resulting free radicals — Optimal gene expression related to cardiovascular health — Normal cellular and DNA repair

The Suracell team then creates your individualized PGH Program, comprised of specific nutritional supplements related to your genetic makeup and unique needs, as well as lifestyle recommendations for healthy aging. Only Suracell emphasizes specific genetic characteristics related to the five key healthy aging processes when developing these personalized programs.

Suracell “Core Nutrition” products can be ordered without DNA testing, while the “Repair” products are included as part of the complete PGH Program.


Suracell’s DNA Analysis kits are available through medical spas, physician offices and wellness centers nationwide.

Full Article

I have taken the tests, and am waiting for my results. It has been over two weeks, I will keep you posted.

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DNA EFFECT

Silhouettes Day Spa - ENGLEWOOD FL Spa Now Open - Ionithermie

 

This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com.

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Silhouettes Day Spa

REVIEW THIS SPA NOW

ENGLEWOOD, FL – Charity Cain believes there are certain luxuries women won’t give up — even during economic uncertainties.

“The thing about Americans and Europeans is that they want to look pretty and will spend money on making themselves look good,” Cain said, “especially women.”

The former office where she began her career in real estate has been transformed into her latest business, Silhouettes Day Spa, located at 2240 S. McCall Road.

The path to the front door leads to a tranquil escape away from Englewood.

Once inside, the interior has been converted to a sea of deep burgundy, mahogany furnishings and gold trimming. Soothing music and scents of essential oils fill the air.

Above a product showcase are bold letters that spell the word “inspire.”

“That’s exactly what we want to do,” she said, “to inspire people when they come in here.”

Cain’s personal struggle became her latest endeavor.

After her fourth child, she felt uncomfortable with her body.

“I tried everything. I’ve gone to Walgreens, I’ve gone to Wal-Mart. I’ve bought every pill,” she said.

But it wasn’t until she traveled overseas when Cain discovered “Ionithermie” and decided to bring it to Englewood.

Ionithermie is a treatment involving the application of electronic stimulation to areas of the body through a body mask of conductive clay. The cost is $149-$159 per session.

Other services offered at the spa include five different types of massages including of Swedish, prenatal and couples; various facials, body wraps, spray tans and waxing services.

After three treatments, Cain was convinced.

“My skin was firmer, my stomach was more toned and I lost my stretch marks,” she said.

So she purchased the products and opened the spa Feb. 25.

As businesses are closing because of the economic crunch, Cain said she has been “slammed” and she believes the reason is she has products that people want.

When Tiffany McMenamin first heard about the Ionithermie treatments, she was skeptical.

But when she noticed Cain’s results, she budgeted for months in advance to be able to afford six sessions, totaling $800.

McMenamin, who just had a baby, said she noticed her dark purple stretch marks reduce to a pale white and she said that she lost a total of 32 inches.

“Before, it looked like Freddy Kruger attacked my body,” she said.

But after her treatments were complete, she was so impressed with the results.

“People will be hooked on it,” McMenamin said.

Silhouettes day spa
2240 S. McCall Road
Englewood, FL

Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays to Saturdays; Mondays by appointment.

Ionitermie Video