Wellness Business News
Brain care is a rising wellness category | Here’s What to Expect in the World of Wellness in 2023 | The growing menopause-at-work market | Therme Group plans US$200m urban wellbeing resort in South Korea
Brain care is a rising wellness category
There’s a new wellness trend in town.
Self-care gained new meaning in 2020, when many people were stuck at home, some in solitude. Even after emerging from lockdown, many have retained their new outlooks and understanding on issues like work-life balance. In the case of wellness, the focus has been on mental health, giving way to a new term called “brain care.”
Here’s What to Expect in the World of Wellness in 2023
linger nearly three years later. And for many, COVID-19 drastically changed how we view our wellness regimens, not to mention, the collective feeling that in times of uncertainty — whether of health, career, or home — it’s up to us to take the lead in establishing self-care routines that boost our head-to-toe well-being.
The growing menopause-at-work market
Menopause — a condition that's little discussed and poorly understood — is gaining more attention from employers rethinking the health benefits they offer women.
Therme Group plans US$200m urban wellbeing resort in South Korea
Thermal wellbeing organisation and developer Therme Group has partnered with the Incheon Free Economic Zone (IFEZ) to create a year-round wellbeing destination in the South Korean city of Incheon