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Preference For Convenient Surgical Options Bodes Well For Personal Care

This article was originally published in The Rose Sheet

Executive Summary

The rapid growth of minimally invasive procedures within the cosmetic surgery ambit signals a prioritization of convenience that bodes well for high-end, results-driven personal-care products, according to Datamonitor

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Plastic surgery popularity gains

Surgical and non-surgical activity rose 27% in 2007, American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery reports. AAFPRS members say men are increasingly willing to go under the knife, with 30% of the increase attributed to men and 26% to women. However, women still make up 81% of all surgical procedures and 82% of non-surgical procedures performed. Interest in plastic surgery also crosses ethnic lines: African-American cosmetic surgical patients grew by 40% over the past eight years, compared with a 19% increase among Hispanics, a 7% jump among Caucasians, and an 8% decrease among Asian-American patients. According to The Benchmarking Company, heightened interest in plastic surgery has opened up the market for topical skin-care products that complement aesthetic procedures (1"The Rose Sheet" July 30, 2007, p. 5). In particular, rise of non-invasive surgical options, like Botox or hyaluronic acid injections, bodes well for results-driven personal-care products, according to Datamonitor (2"The Rose Sheet" Feb. 25, 2008, p. 4)...

Plastic surgery popularity gains

Surgical and non-surgical activity rose 27% in 2007, American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery reports. AAFPRS members say men are increasingly willing to go under the knife, with 30% of the increase attributed to men and 26% to women. However, women still make up 81% of all surgical procedures and 82% of non-surgical procedures performed. Interest in plastic surgery also crosses ethnic lines: African-American cosmetic surgical patients grew by 40% over the past eight years, compared with a 19% increase among Hispanics, a 7% jump among Caucasians, and an 8% decrease among Asian-American patients. According to The Benchmarking Company, heightened interest in plastic surgery has opened up the market for topical skin-care products that complement aesthetic procedures (1"The Rose Sheet" July 30, 2007, p. 5). In particular, rise of non-invasive surgical options, like Botox or hyaluronic acid injections, bodes well for results-driven personal-care products, according to Datamonitor (2"The Rose Sheet" Feb. 25, 2008, p. 4)...

L’Oréal Launches Skin Genesis For Women 30+, Items For Face, Hair and Kids

L'Oréal is preparing a number of launches for summer including Skin Genesis, a four-SKU "multi-layer, cell-strengthening" skin-care collection presented during the National Association of Chain Drug Stores Marketplace June 23-26 in Boston

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