Thu 30 Aug '07

Attention Event Planners…..

Country Meadow can offer you and your clients quality gifts that are actually usable and are not cheap and cheesy!
We can do something as simple as a single soap bar packaged in an organza bag or we can customize an entire gift set in various packaging to fit your event.

If you have corporate accounts that want private labeling with their company logo we can offer that through our graphics designer: EcoKind Design. What better way for your corporate accounts to keep their name in front of their customers than with a custom designed label!
Note: Private/Custom labeling will require extra lead time.

Our products are suitable for any type of event as a natural and eco-friendly gift. Each and every guest at your event will enjoy receiving our product as a remembrance to a special occasion.

We here at Country Meadow do not believe in those small, dinky 1 and 2 oz. sample size gifts. In addition to our full size products we are also able to scale down just a bit for the budget conscience client. We can offer our soap in 2.25 oz. size, our lotion in a 4 oz. size and our sugar scrubs in either our 3.5 oz. foil packets or a 4-6 oz. jar. (Smaller size products will require an additional lead time as these are not a normal product offering).

As of August 2007 we are currently working on new and special packaging/wrapping for our soap that will be available for event planners only! We hope to have the new packaging/wrapping available by October 2007.

Please feel free to subscribe to our Event Planners Newsletter. This newsletter is for event planners only and will be used to notify you of new products, new packaging, gift ideas and any other information that may apply to your event business. 

Rebecca

Country Meadow Ltd.

New Logo

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Wed 29 Aug '07

Aroma & Arousal….

Aroma & Arousal

By Scott McCredie for MSN Health & Fitness

You come home after a long day of work to find dinner prepared and your partner sitting at the table with a sly grin. The meal is like none you’ve ever had.

First course: cheese pizza, warm and gooey but kinda bland. That’s followed by a bowl of buttered microwave popcorn. Revenge for something you said? Then, a weird dessert: pumpkin pie smothered with lavender ice cream.

“Honey,” you finally ask, “is everything okay?”

Odd Food Smells and Libido

Pumpkin pie and lavender, and other food smells like doughnuts and licorice, don’t seem like the kinds of odors men would find sexually stimulating. Yet for several years, these allegedly potent odors have appeared in media stories about male aphrodisiacs, garnering wide-eyed looks and more than a few guffaws.

The odors from the above-mentioned foods were the most sexually tantalizing of those tested in a study carried out in the late 1990s by Dr. Alan R. Hirsch, who directs the Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation in Chicago.

Among all the odors tested, the combination of pumpkin pie and lavender produced the greatest increase in arousal (a 40 percent increase in penile blood flow).

The next most arousing odors were a mix of cinnamon buns, doughnuts and licorice; pumpkin pie and doughnuts; orange; and lavender and doughnuts. Other stimulating aromas were buttered popcorn and cheese pizza. About what you’d expect to smell in a frat house rec room the morning after a big party.

Sexual Scents: Fantasy?

Brown University psychologist Rachel Herz, who has made a career investigating the science of scent, laughs a little derisively when asked about the Hirsch study.

“There’s nothing inherent about the scent of any particular food that makes it sexual or arousing,” says Herz, author of the upcoming book The Scent of Desire: Discovering Our Enigmatic Sense of Smell (Harper Collins, October 2007). “There’s nothing inherent about any odor to make you do anything. It’s all a function of how you’ve acquired the meaning of that smell.”

And the meaning of pumpkin pie’s odor to these 30 men?

“How odor comes to have meaning to the person is through their past experiences with it,” she says. “So without ever having smelled pumpkin pie before, it’s not going to do anything for you. But if your first sexual experience was at Thanksgiving under the dessert table, then that scent may become associated with it. In the future, when you smell pumpkin pie, you are brought back to that time and place in a very instant and visceral way, and may experience sexual arousal.”

A study Herz directed at Brown, published in the International Journal of Comparative Psychology, proved the validity of this idea with several experiments. One involved 30 women playing a computer game. Permeating the air was a novel odor concocted from buttered popcorn, dirt, and rain. The more satisfying it was for a woman to play the game, the more likely it was for her to rate the odor as pleasant. Other experiments showed a similar trend.

Smell and Emotion

Why is it that smells can be so evocative and, in some cases, sexually stimulating? The answer has to do with human physiology and psychology.

Among the senses, smell is different from the other four primary senses because it is connected to the part of the brain responsible for emotions and memory. In fact, according to Herz, the olfactory cortex—the part of the brain where smells are processed—was the site from which “the parts of the brain that are responsible for emotional processing, associative learning, basic memory and motivation—the collective structures of the limbic system—evolved from. In other words, the ability to experience and express emotion grew directly out of our brain’s ability to process smell.”

Herz believes the link between emotion and smell is so strong that they’re “functionally the same.” One result of this connection is that once a smell is associated with an emotion or memory, it tends to remain there for a long time. If you come across that odor again, your brain makes the association so quickly that you don’t have to even think about it. It’s almost a reflex.

And first impressions count. Herz says she likes the odor of skunk because she has positive memories associated with her first encounter with the perfume of a skunk: riding in a car through the country on a lovely summer day with her mother. Another example comes from a woman Herz knows who told her she hated the smell of roses because the first time she had smelled them was at her mother’s funeral.

The role of scent in creating memories was demonstrated in an unusual German study published in Science earlier this year. Scientists had subjects play a computerized game in which they memorized the location of playing card pairs. Once a pair’s location was learned, the subjects received a waft of a strong rose scent. Later, when the subjects went to sleep (a time when the brain processes things it has recently learned), the rose scents were again administered. The next day, the rose-scented sleepers performed an average of 11 percentage points better on memory tests of card pair locations. “By presenting the rose odor cues we … enhanced the transfer of these memories into the neocortex,” neuroscientist Jan Born, one of the study’s co-authors, told The New York Times.

Men: Pavlovian Dogs?

Herz says she knows of no scientifically credible research that has looked at specific odors that provoke male sexual response. She ascribes the dearth of scientific research into odors and desire to the fact that there is not enough commercial interest.

“From the point of view of the marketplace, what’s really more of a moneymaker is a fragrance that will make women sexually aroused and interested in men,” she says. “It’s somewhat culturally taken for granted that men are always sexually aroused. The harder part is getting women to be.”

But Hirsch believes that Herz is being unfair to his study and too simplistic in her analysis of why an odor can be sexually arousing. He says his study (which Herz admits she hasn’t seen) is scientifically valid. It was randomized, controlled, and peer-reviewed before being published in three different journals, including the Journal of Neurological and Orthopaedic Medicine and Surgery.

“Sexual arousal is inhibited by all sorts of different things,” Hirsch explains. “By inhibiting those inhibitors [with odors], you can induce sexual arousal. It doesn’t have to be a direct affect.”

He offers several other possible reasons why these food odors increased sexual arousal.

“It could have induced a Pavlovian conditioned response, making men recall their girlfriends and wives,” he says. Or they could have stimulated a part of the brain called the RAS (Reticular Activating System), increasing the men’s alertness and their awareness of sexual cues around them. Odors could also have acted directly on another part of the brain, the septal nucleus, which controls a male’s erection. “There’s a direct anatomic connection between the olfactory bulb at the top of the nose and the septal nucleus. So anatomically it makes some sense.”

The biggest challenge in interpreting the results of his study, Hirsch says, was to find a hypothesis that might explain why food odors were always sexually stimulating to males, when items such as perfume were not. “The best theory we could come up with,” he says, “was evolutionary. That in our distant past our ancestors would congregate at a point of food kill. That’s where they would have had the greatest chance of finding a mate and having successful procreation. So there may have been a selective advantage to have increased penile blood flow in response to the smell of food.”

Sniffing Out What Works for You

Although plenty of potentially arousing scent elixirs exist for men, the trouble is finding the ones that appeal to an individual. It’s a daunting task because the average human nose is capable of distinguishing between 10,000 to 40,000 different odors.

If no universal aroma aphrodisiac can exist, how does one go about finding effective scent triggers?

“I don’t know, other than retrospective self-analysis,” Herz says with a laugh. “You can think of a past sexual experience, or a lover who had a particular fragrance you found exciting, or be aware when you come across an odor you find arousing.”

Another way to discover what odors pique your carnal interests, as well as those of your sweetie, would be to pull on your lab coat, grab some test tubes, and start experimenting. If that doesn’t sound romantic enough, try heading to the bedroom with an armful of fruits, vegetables, candies, cakes and liquors—and anything else you might care to sniff, nibble, or rub.

Rebecca

Country Meadow Ltd.

New Logo

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Tue 28 Aug '07

More New Packaging…..

We now have our Essentials soaps available in the new packaging.

Our Herbal Tea soaps should be ready by Labor Day.

Currently in the works: Herbal Tea (lotion), Gardener’s (lotion), Umoja (cream), Simply Soft (sugar scrubs & creams), Fall Harvest (soap & lotion), customized gift boxes.

Birch soap

Birch Soap

Juniper soap

Juniper Soap

Spruce soap

Spruce Soap

lavender patchouli soap

Lavender/Patchouli Soap

lavender rosemary soap

Lavender/Rosemary Soap

patchouli vanilla soap

Patchouli/Vanilla Soap

Rebecca

Country Meadow

New Logo

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Mon 27 Aug '07

Birthday Sale – 1 Day Only

It’s a Happy Birthday Sale – 1 Day Only

Sale Starts August 28, 2007 / 6:00 am

Sale Ends August 28, 2007 / Midnight

25% Off All Regular Priced Items

Enter Code: Birthday07 in coupon area during checkout

Limited to products in stock

Rebecca

Country Meadow

New Logo

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Thu 23 Aug '07

Meet, Eat & Greet….Join Us Won’t You?

Join us and other local merchants August 25 & 26 at Central Market – Shoreline for their annual Meet, Eat & Greet.

Held every year Central Market features locally produced products and the people who make them! Meet them face to face, ask questions about their products and enjoy free samples.

We will be handing out free samples of our SpaLusion and Umoja soaps and will be reintroducing our Fall Harvest soap for the upcoming fall season.

We will be available Sunday, August 26th from 12:30-2:30pm in the Natural Resource Center. Please stop by, say hi and get your free samples…and don’t forget to check out the soap bar deli and slice off a little piece of fall!

pumpkin spice

Pumpkin Spice – Fall Harvest Collection

autumn winds

Autumn Winds – Fall Harvest Collection

apple spice

Apple Spice – Fall Harvest Collection

Rebecca

Country Meadow Ltd.

New Logo

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Tue 21 Aug '07

We Are Looking For Guest Bloggers….

To give our blog related content (and make it even more interesting for our readers!) we are contemplating having guest bloggers post on our blog.

Our retail target market fits into the following catagory:

Women 29-59

Middle Income

Interested in Health, Beauty, Fashion, Healthy Eating, Womens Issues, Eco-Friendly

If you offer a service, have any how-to tips or have a business that caters to the above market and you would like to be a guest blogger please contact us at sales(at)countrymeadowltd(dot)com for more details. Your business must not compete with ours and we will not accept mlm’s.

Rebecca

Country Meadow Ltd.

New Logo

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Tue 14 Aug '07

Summer Clearance Sale….

As much as I hate to say it…..summer is coming to an end…

Which means it is time to put those ‘like-summer’ products on sale!

The following 4.5 oz soap bars are now on sale:

Exotic Nights (Jasmine, Amber Bamboo, Mandarin Bamboo)

Herb Patch (Ginger Lime, Blackberry Sage, Sweetgrass & Sage)

Island Tropics (Hawaiian White Ginger, Island Breeze, Plumeria)

Details:

20% off Regular Price

Sale Starts August 14, 2007 / Ends August 19, 2007

Limited to Quantity in Stock

hawaiian white ginger

Hawaiian White Ginger

amber bamboo

Amber Bamboo

ginger lime

Ginger Lime

Rebecca

Country Meadow Ltd.

New Logo

www.countrymeadowltd.com

Mon 13 Aug '07

Possible Issue With Our Email….

I have noticed over the last few days our email has dropped off considerably….

We have not even received any spam!

I just verified with our ISP this morning that they have implemented a new spam filter (which explains the no spam emails!)….

But that could also mean your emails to us have also been caught by the filters and have not reached us.

If you’ve emailed us and have not had a response in 24 hours please give us a call at 425.672.8908. We will then call our ISP to find out how to let your email through.

Rebecca

Country Meadow Ltd.

New Logo

Wed 8 Aug '07

Now Taking Pre-Orders for Fall Products….

Attention wholesale customers…

We are now taking pre-orders for our Fall Harvest Collection of soaps!

Because this is a seasonal collection production is limited and once we are out there will be no more.

Our Fall Harvest collection is very popular during the fall months and even though we guestimate from last years sales how much to manufacture we often run low or even out of stock on the soaps. Soap takes 3-4 weeks to cure so please keep this in mind in planning for your fall sales.

It is in your best interest to guarantee availability to pre-order/pre-pay now. Orders will ship starting September 1, 2007.

We should have the new soap box packaging ready by September 1, 2007.

Fall Harvest Collection includes: Apple Spice, Autumn Winds and Pumpkin Spice.

If you have any questions please give us a call or send us an email.

If you are a retail business looking for a wholesale account please contact us at: wholesale (at)countrymeadowltd(dot)com.

pumpkin spice soap log

Pumpkin Spice Soap Log

apple spice soap log

Apple Spice Soap Log

autumn winds soap bar

Autumn Winds Soap Bar (note: soap bar packaging will be changing to our new look for the fall season!)

Rebecca

Country Meadow Ltd.

New Logo

www.countrymeadowltd.com

 

Tue 7 Aug '07

Deadly Beauty Treatments….

Deadly Beauty Treatments…

By Melba Newsome, Prevention magazine

In May 2001, When Terri Bowling, 42, walked into the Steliotes dental-Medical Spa in McMurray, PA, for laser hair removal, she thought her husband had given her the perfect Mother’s Day gift. “The technician wore a long white coat, had all these certificates on the wall, and said she’d been doing this for a while,” recalls Bowling, who was looking forward to never having to shave her legs again. Once the procedure started, however, she began to worry.

“The pain was worse than childbirth,” Bowling says. “Every time she zapped my legs, the skin would come off. I could see a purple checker pattern forming. By the time I got home, my legs were swollen to twice their size and covered with fluid-filled blisters.”

The next day, an emergency room physician diagnosed Bowling with second-degree burns. Back at the spa, she discovered that the woman who had performed the procedure was a cosmetologist—and that the only doctor associated with the spa was a dentist, who’d used his license to purchase the laser.

Bowling filed a complaint with the Pennsylvania State Board of Medicine. The spa owner, Theodore Steliotes, DMD, was fined $1,000 for practicing medicine without a license, and Bowling received a small settlement from his malpractice insurance.

She was lucky compared with Shiri Berg. On December 28, 2004, the 22-year-old college student planned to head to Premier Body Laser and Skin Clinic in Raleigh, NC, for laser hair removal. At home, she covered herself with a numbing gel the clinic had sold her to prepare her skin. But as she drove to the spa, Berg had a seizure. She soon lapsed into a coma and died 8 days later.

An autopsy concluded that Berg had suffered lethal brain damage from an overdose of the numbing gel, a potent combination of lidocaine, tetracaine, and phenylephrine. Under North Carolina law, doctors are supposed to take a medical history or perform a physical exam before writing any prescriptions. Premier had no doctors on site, yet the staff routinely dispensed the gel, which is safe only on small patches of skin. The state medical board concluded that Premier’s medical director, Ira David Uretzky, MD, had exhibited unprofessional conduct. His medical license was suspended for 6 months.

There’s nothing wrong with medical spas in concept—or, in many cases, in practice. Dermatologist Bruce Katz, MD, who opened the first medical spa in 1999, says his patients had been asking for something like it for years. “A lot of our patients were telling us that they went to spas and got massages and facials but that they didn’t get any lasting benefit from the treatments,” says Katz, who is director of the Cosmetic Surgery & Laser Clinic at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, as well as medical director of Juva Skin & Laser Center. “We thought, ‘Why can’t we have a relaxing spa setting, but with a dermatologist doing things that really work?’”

The combination proved alluring. These hybrid facilities have become the fastest-growing segment of the $11 billion spa industry, according to the International Medical Spa Association. By 2004, there were approximately 400 medical spas, or medispas, across the country. Now there are about 2,000. The problem is that not all medispas deliver on both parts of the promise inherent in the name. Yes, you can get a facial and a pedicure at a medispa—along with a chemical peel for your crow’s-feet, Botox for your wrinkles, and a laser treatment to whisk away sunspots and excess hair. The one thing you might not get is the attention of anyone with a medical license. And that can be dangerous.

“I don’t think a lot of people think of themselves as patients when they walk into these places, but they should,” says Michael McGuire, MD, communications chair of the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery. “It’s not like going to a beauty parlor or the cosmetic counter. These are medical treatments.”

They are indeed: Anything that affects the structure or function of the skin qualifies as a medical procedure, as defined by most state medical boards. That means it must be performed by a doctor or supervised by one. The catch is that states have very different rules about what supervision means. So in Louisiana, only a physician or dentist can wield a laser—while in Florida, a doctor can “supervise” the treatment from an office 75 miles away. A medispa must have a doctor as a medical director, but in many states, he or she may visit only periodically and may not be available in case of problems. Sometimes the medical director is a “ghost doctor” who never sets foot in the spa but simply leases the use of his name.

“In medispas, you can have untrained people doing procedures without proper supervision in unsafe settings,” McGuire says. “I’ve seen some pretty god-awful-looking results.”

The increase in medispas has been accompanied by a jump in reported problems. A 2003 survey of members of the American Society for Dermatologic Surgery showed a 41% increase since 2001 in the number of patients coming for help after a skin treatment botched by a nondoctor technician. Laser and light-based treatments seem to cause the most trouble (nerve damage and scarring in addition to burns), but chemical peels, microdermabrasion, and other treatments are not risk free. Researchers have reported some appalling cases. In a Northern California spa, an esthetician trying to remove a tattoo from a woman’s ankle used a pumice stone and glycolic acid. When the woman’s ankle became infected, the esthetician told her not to worry, but after 10 days the woman went to an urgent care facility. The doctor there said that if she’d waited much longer, he would have needed to amputate.

The Ugly Price of Cut-Rate Beauty

Medispas often offer low prices on popular treatments like Botox—a major lure for customers. But when you see the corners that can be cut, the deals don’t look so good.

Allergan, the only maker of FDA-approved Botox, for example, sells every vial at the same undiscounted price: $505. Because a low-price spa can’t economize on the Botox itself, it must find other ways to cut costs, says Susan C. Taylor, MD, a spokesperson for the American Academy of Dermatologists.

One solution: using workers who have minimal training and experience. If Botox isn’t injected properly, eyelids may not open all the way or eyebrows may droop until the effects of the toxin wear off. Mistakes can occur even when a doctor does the injection, but, says Taylor, “there’s a big difference between a physician-supervised, trained nurse practitioner and an inexperienced medical assistant who might be earning $13 per hour. You can lower your price if you’re paying workers $13 an hour.”

There can be another explanation for a suspiciously good deal. Allergan sells Botox as a powder, which should be mixed with 2 cc of sterile water before use. But some spas may stretch their supply by adding more water, says McGuire, who’s had patients come in after a $99 medispa special, complaining that the Botox had no effect. “I always say that the patient is not getting cheap Botox, she’s getting expensive water,” says McGuire.

Does that mean that a medical school diploma on the wall provides perfect protection? Of course not: One of the most notorious of Botox counterfeiters was Idaho physician Ivyl Wells, MD, who was sentenced last December to 6 months in jail for using cut-rate botulinum toxin labeled not for human use. Criminals aside, though, doctors can prevent a multitude of mishaps.

He or she needn’t actually be hands-on for the procedure, says dermatologist Katz, who heads the medical advisory board for the Medical Spa Society, a trade group. Technicians perform many of the treatments at Juva—but at that medispa and others like it, every customer sees a doctor first for a medical history and treatment plan. And a doctor is always at the spa when procedures take place.That means prescription-strength medications can be used in pampering treatments: At Juva, the anti-aging facial sometimes includes fluorouracil, a drug that destroys precancerous cells (in higher doses, it’s used in chemotherapy). Spa goers can get a full range of medical procedures, including laser treatment using whichever of several different kinds of lasers is best for their skin. Many less-reputable medispas have only a single laser, which may not be right for some customers. And with a physician down the hall, a technician can call one if, say, a suspicious-looking mole is noticed during a massage.

The doctor can also step in if a problem arises, says Patricia Farris, MD, a clinical assistant professor of dermatology at Tulane University. That can be critical, because no procedure is without risk. Take the skin “polishing” treatment known as microdermabrasion: It’s widely used and generally safe, but Farris saw it go wrong in her office. As her technician treated one woman a few years ago, “every single place we touched turned into a giant hive,” Farris says. The danger signal suggested an allergic reaction called angioedema, in which swelling can obstruct the throat and prevent breathing. “I had to give her emergency injections of antihistamine and cortisone,” says Farris, who published a report of the case in Dermatologic Surgery.

Doctors have a breadth and depth of knowledge that can be sorely missed, as Jordan Miles, 52, found out. In October 2004, the stay-at-home mom visited a medical spa in Panama City, FL, to have some sunspots on her back removed by laser. The technician who sold her the treatment assured her that it would be relatively painless.

To the contrary, recalls Miles: “It felt like they were sticking a hot curling iron to my back. Within an hour of leaving the spa, I was in severe pain and throwing up. When I went to a doctor, he said I had second- and third-degree burns. About a week later, they started oozing and turned into sores.”

The problem was actually quite simple and easily avoided by anyone with basic medical knowledge. Miles was tan. A laser works by zapping cells or unwanted hair with highly focused light; the light is absorbed by pigment in the targeted cells, which heat up so much they’re destroyed. But when the patient is tanned, the surrounding skin can be badly burned, too. The treatment also presents special risks for African Americans, Hispanics, and people of many other ethnicities, even if their skin doesn’t appear to be highly pigmented.

“It’s not necessarily the fault of the device but how it’s being used,” says dermatologist Vic Narurkar, MD, an assistant clinical professor at the University of California, Davis, and past president of the American Society of Cosmetic Dermatology & Aesthetic Surgery. “And it’s not only about technical ability. It’s about knowing when to treat and when not to treat.”

Making Spas Safer

It’s a common complaint that laws change only after someone’s been hurt. In the case of medispas, there have been plenty of injuries and at least one death, but the laws remain an inconsistent and threadbare patchwork.

After the death of Shiri Berg in North Carolina, a state legislator in 2005 introduced a proposal that would have stiffened the training requirements for technicians providing laser treatment. It set off a firestorm among cosmetologists and other groups and was amended so many times that its sponsor finally withdrew it from consideration. Something similar happened in California, where then-state Senator Liz Figueroa introduced one bill making it a misdemeanor for anyone but a physician, nurse, or physician’s assistant to use a laser device, and a second bill requiring a doctor to be in the spa during any laser or other cosmetic medical procedure. But the law that was signed last year simply ordered the state medical board to review the issue and adopt new regulations by January 1, 2009.

The Medical Spa Society is developing voluntary standards for the industry, says Katz. The rules will compel spas to have a physician on site anytime a medical procedure is performed and will make it crystal clear that the term medical procedure applies to many of the treatments most commonly performed at medispas—laser hair removal or skin resurfacing and injections of Restylane or Botox, along with therapies like microdermabrasion.

But it’s likely to take at least a decade for the regulatory kinks to be worked out. Until then, the responsibility for a good outcome rests on the shoulders of the consumer. “You have to know the people, the place, and the product,” says McGuire. “That’s the only way to ensure you have a good chance of getting the result you want and that you won’t wind up with a catastrophe.”

Nearly 3 years after Jordan Miles tried to have her sunspots removed, her back is still so severely scarred that she can’t wear anything sleeveless or cut low in back. Terri Bowling’s foray into a medispa in search of a bargain has permanently altered her lifestyle. Once an avid scuba diver, she had to give up the sport because she can no longer go in the sun. She hasn’t worn a skirt, dress, or pair of shorts since 2001. And she still has to shave her legs.

Shiri Berg no longer has to do that.

The Smart Woman’s Guide to Medispas

A medical spa (aka medispa, med-spa, laser clinic, or laser center) can deliver pampering, convenience, and the cosmetic improvements you want—but the wrong spa can also bring you pain, scars, or worse. Here’s how to make sure you stay safe.

Ask if a physician will be on site during your treatment. “If they say, ‘Our medical director is a doctor,’ that’s not enough. Ask, ‘Where is he?’” advises Bruce Katz, MD, chairman of the medical advisory board of the Medical Spa Society. No doc? You walk.

Make sure the doctor—not a technician—takes your medical history. (It’s okay for a physician’s assistant to do it, so long as a doctor reviews the history.) Proper treatment will depend on someone asking you the right questions—and knowing when one of your answers raises a red flag.

Find out what the procedure should feel like, so you’ll be able to recognize inappropriate pain or other problems. Web sites such as MedlinePlus (www.medlineplus.gov) provide thorough explanations of common cosmetic procedures.

Beware of deals that seem too good to be true. The manufacturer of Botox, for instance, offers no discounts; the company advises consumers to be leery of prices below about $300 for an area like the space between the brows.

Know if your state protects you from botched treatments. For an exclusive rundown of safety measures in all 50 states, go to our Medical Spa Law Finder.

Protect yourself from the trickiest procedure

Laser treatments done by people without medical training account for the bulk of the problems in recent studies. Be aware that there are no standardized requirements for training, and make sure a doctor is at the spa when you have your procedure.

You should also:

Ask to see before-and-after photos of other customers who had similar conditions and treatments. Request a patch test, especially if your skin tends to be sensitive. Avoid undergoing a laser procedure if you’re tanned. If you have dark skin or are a person of color, lasers such as the Nd:YAG decrease your risk of burns. Disclose medical conditions, allergies, and any medications you’re taking, because they may affect your treatment. Tell your doctor if you have a history of scarring or herpes. Check out the American Society for Laser Medicine & Surgery (www.aslms.org) for more safety information.

Rebecca

Country Meadow Ltd.

New Logo

www.countrymeadowltd.com

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