Beyond supplements for insomnia, moodiness, hot flashes and libido, menopausal women may want more help for bone, skin and hair health, as well as adrenal support.
Improve your store's customer service with the monthly secret shopper. This month, David A. Mark, PhD tackles the question of vitamin D supplements.
Each month, NFM’s secret shopper heads incognito into a natural products store with a question. The employee’s answer—and our expert’s evaluation of the response—is reported here. Our aim: to help you improve your store’s customer service.
We went back to Steelsmith and Weil to expand on their recommendations in our guide to the top 20 supplements. Here’s their advice on managing common baby-boomer health concerns.
Retailers need to understand exactly how the products they’re selling work, as well as be able to clearly impart this information to their customers. After all, the supplements’ benefits aren’t as simple as how they react with our taste buds.
Here are suggestions as to how manufacturers can improve outreach—and how retailers can best leverage such interactions.
Here are suggestions for how retailers can better stock supplements to make them sell and why it works.
Here's a primer on some of the most well-known supplements and what the science says about them, from A to Z.
Any claims for “my ORAC is bigger than your ORAC” need to take into account exactly what ORAC methods were used for the products being compared.
From probiotic Pixy Stix to fish-oil gummies, manufacturers are now offering an array of creative options for busy, pill-fatigued consumers who want their supplements on their own terms.