Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Puma top global lifestyle brand in India

Greenpeace hails Puma's concrete PFC cutting initiatives














German sporting lifestyle major Puma has quietly emerged as the top international brand in India by revenue, upstaging its direct rivals like Adidas and fashion apparel names such as Benetton and Zara, according the regulatory filings.

BENGALURU: German sporting lifestyle major Puma has quietly emerged as the top international brand in India by revenue, upstaging its direct rivals like Adidas and fashion apparel names such as Benetton and Zara, according the regulatory filings.

The local operations of Puma SE, part of the French luxury goods conglomerate Kering now, reported domestic revenue of Rs 766 crore during the calendar year 2014, showed the company's filings with Registrar of Companies last week. This was ahead of Adidas (Rs 719 crore), Nike (Rs 624 crore), Benetton (Rs 594 crore), Levi's (Rs 599 crore) and Zara (Rs 580 crore) in FY14.

Puma follows calendar year for reporting business numbers, while most of the other brands like Benetton and Zara follow April-to-March financial year, and their latest numbers are not yet in public domain. A recent media report said Zara reported Rs 721 crore and Benetton is said to have clocked Rs 802 crore in FY15. Puma, growing at about 30% in the first six months, is on pace for Rs 900 crore revenue this calendar year. Puma will be marginally trailing homegrown Madura Fashion & Lifestyle's Louis Phillipe in the overall brand sweepstakes by company revenue.

Follow me on twitter for more Daily updates

                     For more reports from Asia  www.search.dowellresearch.com

                      For any Market research consulting services  www.dowellresearch.com


Vietnamese users prefer low-cost tablets: GfK

Vietnamese users prefer low-cost tablets: GfK

About 582,000 tablets were sold in Viet Nam in the first five months of the year, registering a 34 per cent year-on-year increase, GfK market research agency said.
Apple's iPad Mini Wifi 16GB with a 7.9 inch screen. Vietnamese customers have a high demand of low-cost small-screen tablets in the first five months of the year, GfK market research agency said. Photo thegioididong.com
In a report released on July 6, GfK said the growth was fuelled by high demands for low-cost small-screen tablets.
As many as 76 per cent of the tablets were priced lower than US$300, compared with 50 per cent during the same period last year. In the high-end segment, tablets costing more than $500 accounted for 14 per cent, compared with 29 per cent in the same period last year.
In the middle segment, tablets costing $300 to $500 comprised 11 per cent of the sold units, marking a 11 per cent year-on-year fall. The number of brands in the Vietnamese tablet market dropped from 56 to 49.
Customers preferred tablets with screens measuring 7.9 inches or smaller. Seven out of 10 tablets sold during the period were of this segment, higher than that in 2014.
GfK Vietnam Managing Director Tran Khoa Van said the tablet market would witness higher sales in the third quarter with many promotions to be offered on the occasion of the opening of the school year in September. He said the sales of tablets this year might reach about 1.9 million units.

Follow me on twitter for more Daily updates
                     For more reports from Asia  www.search.dowellresearch.com
                      For any Market research consulting services  www.dowellresearch.com

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Chronic constipation affecting urban India's quality of life: Survey.

Chronic constipation affecting urban India's quality of life: Survey

  • IANS, Kolkata
  • Updated: Jun 17, 2015 22:04 IST

FMT involves the delivery of stool from a healthy pre-screened donor to a person with gastrointestinal conditions associated with changes in the gut flora. (Shutterstock)


Bhaskor Banerjee had a tough time dealing with it in Piku, but in reality, chronic constipation has significantly affected urban India's quality of life, a survey claimed on Wednesday.
Chronic constipation significantly impacts people's quality of life due to lack of sleep, and mental and physical stress, compared to those who do not have constipation, according to the "Gut-Health Survey".
It said 14% of India's urban population suffer from chronic constipation, an inability to pass stool for more than three times a week and for more than three months at a stretch.
The findings showed 60% of people with chronic constipation opted for home remedies as the most preferred treatment option for relief.
However, half the people who self-medicate eventually visited a doctor for cure, said the survey.
Irritability, lack of interest in work, mood swings, worry and embarrassment were the most common effects, noted among 3,500 individuals across six Indian cities - Mumbai, Delhi, Lucknow, Kolkata, Hyderabad and Coimbatore.
The findings highlighted that incidence of constipation was higher in India than the worldwide average of 10%.
Leading causes for constipation were significantly higher frequency of eating non-vegetarian food, low water intake, snacking and eating fried, oily, spicy, junk and processed food.
The survey said: "Three out of four people with chronic constipation said it leads to other medical problems/complications with piles and haemorrhoids, ulcers, abdominal pain and anal fissures as the leading issues."
"While the relief to this nagging issue is easy, people with constipation generally try out multiple self-medication options and come to a doctor only after the issue has become chronic.
"Untreated constipation can lead to complications like faecal incontinence, haemorrhoids and anal fissures. Greater awareness, timely action, lifestyle modifications and eating right can help people lead a healthy and active life," said Jyoti Ranjan Mohapatra, consultant gastrointestinal and liver diseases, associated with Peerless/Apollo Hospital.

Follow me on twitter for more Daily updates
                     For more reports from Asia  www.search.dowellresearch.com
                      For any Market research consulting services  www.dowellresearch.com

Rural Indian children receive wrong treatments for deadly ailments: Study

DURHAM, NC - Few health care providers in rural India know the correct treatments for childhood diarrhea and pneumonia – two leading killers of young children worldwide. But even when they do, they rarely prescribe them properly, according to a new Duke University study.
Medical practitioners typically fail to prescribe lifesaving treatments such as oral rehydration salts (ORS). Instead, they typically prescribe unnecessary antibiotics or other potentially harmful drugs, said Manoj Mohanan, a professor in Duke’s Sanford School of Public Policy, and lead author of the study.
Diarrhea and pneumonia accounted for 24 percent of deaths among children 1 to 4 years old, totaling approximately 2 million deaths worldwide in 2011. Bihar, India – where the study was conducted – has an infant mortality rate of 55 per 1000 live births, the highest in the country.
“The Know-Do Gap in Quality of Health Care for Childhood Diarrhea and Pneumonia in Rural India” will be published online Feb. 16, 2015, by JAMA Pediatrics.
“We know from previous studies that providers in rural settings have little medical training and their knowledge of how to treat these two common and deadly ailments is low,” Mohanan said.
“Eighty percent in our study had no medical degree. But much of India’s rural population receives care from such untrained providers, and very few studies have been able to rigorously measure the gap between what providers know and what they do in practice.”
The study involved 340 health care providers. Researchers conducted “vignette” interviews with providers to assess how they would diagnose and treat a hypothetical case. Later, standardized patients – individuals who portrayed patients presenting the same symptoms as in the interviews – made unannounced visits. This strategy enabled researchers to measure the gap between what providers know and what they actually do – the “know-do” gap.
Providers exhibited low levels of knowledge about both diarrhea and pneumonia during the interviews and performed even worse in practice.
For example, for diarrhea, 72 percent of providers reported they would prescribe oral rehydration salts– a life-saving, low-cost and readily available intervention – but only 17 percent actually did so. Those who did prescribe ORS also added other unnecessary or harmful drugs.
In practice, none of the providers gave the correct treatment: only ORS, with or without zinc, and no other potentially harmful drugs. Instead, almost 72 percent of providers gave antibiotics or potentially harmful treatments without ORS.
“Massive over-prescription of antibiotics is a major contributor to rising antibiotic resistance worldwide,” Mohanan said. “Our ongoing studies aim to understand why providers who know they shouldn’t be prescribing antibiotics for conditions like simple diarrhea continue to do so.
“It clearly is not demand from patients alone, which is a common explanation, since none of our standardized patients asked for antibiotics but almost all of them got them,” he said.
Providers with formal medical training still had large gaps between what they knew and did, but were significantly less likely to prescribe harmful medical treatments.
“Our results show that in order to reduce child mortality, we need new strategies to improve diagnosis and treatment of these key childhood illnesses,” Mohanan said. “Our evidence on the gap between knowledge and practice suggests that training alone will be insufficient. We need to understand what incentives cause providers to diverge from proper diagnosis and treatment.”
Mohanan also holds appointments with the Duke Global Health Institute and the Department of Economics. His co-authors are Marcos Vera-Hernandez and Soledad Giardili of University College London; Veena Das of Johns Hopkins University; Jeremy D. Goldhaber-Fiebert of Stanford University School of Medicine; Tracy L. Rabin and Jeremy I. Schwartz of Yale School of Medicine; Sunil S. Raj of the Indian Institute of Public Health; and Aparna Seth of Sambodhi Research and Communications.
Funding for the study was provided by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation as part of the Bihar Evaluation of Social Franchising and Telemedicine (BEST) project.
Follow me on twitter for more Daily updates
                     For more reports from Asia  www.search.dowellresearch.com
                      For any Market research consulting services  www.dowellresearch.com


Sunday, August 2, 2015

Thailand and Malaysia emerging as global economic leaders in the medical tourism industry .

The world medical tourism map is changing spatially and economically. This highly advanced and ever-growing industry serves millions of patients every year, with clinics, treatments and healthcare available more cheaply and readily in developing countries than ever before. A clear industry leader is emerging in South East Asia, overtaking countries in America, Africa and Eastern Europe to become the first port of call for many seeking low-cost procedures abroad.

The worldwide medical tourism industry is work an estimated $100Bn (USD) and covers many aspects of health procedure including dentistry, cardiology, cancer treatments, orthopaedics and cosmetic procedures. There is much debate about whether health tourism can be included under the 'medical tourism' remit, as an increasingly lucrative market in spas, natural remedies and wellbeing treatments is also emerging. This is particularly true for South East Asian countries, whose warm climate and natural resources have long been used to great effect in treating stress-related conditions and general wellbeing needs. How such 'medical tourists' are charted is also emerging as a contentious issues, with definitions of a 'medical tourist' changing according to the country in which they are situated; reason for visiting; time spent in the area; and if a surgical procedure is carried out.

Yet, tourism as an already major economic contributor to South East Asia is emerging as an obvious driver in the growth of medical tourism currently being experienced by the region, with is currently worth an estimated $8.5Bn (USD). Lower cost airline travel as well as ease of access to other Asian tourist destinations has undoubtedly contributed to the influx of patients seeking healthcare solutions in the area. This is particularly true of Thailand, whose long-established tourist credentials give it an edge over medical tourism rivals such as Singapore and South Korea. Yet, Malaysia is catching up with their rivals in terms of healthcare industry growth, offering low-cost medical care in an increasingly more inviting environment.Medical tourism industry

Malayisa reported a 29.3% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) in patient arrivals since 2013. An improvement in available medical technology, increasingly more advanced tourism infrastructure and better marketing techniques such as innovative use of social media ensure the Malaysian health tourism industry is increasingly more appealing to those seeking treatment abroad. The Thai government too are overtaking rivals such as Singapore in their drive to fund marketing campaigns aimed at medical tourism; the gap in quality of care between the two countries has also narrowed in recent years.

Indeed, the 25% decline in medical tourist revenue generated by Singapore between 2012 ($1110Mn USD) and 2013 ($832Mn USD) is creating ample space for other South East Asian countries such as Thailand and Malaysia to exploit this ever-growing industry. Ease of access in both healthcare and tourism due to legal restructuring by the ASEAN Economic Community combined with the high cost of medical treatment in places such as the USA is increasing the demand in some of South East Asia's biggest private hospitals.

It remains to be seen whether other emerging countries in the region such as South Korea and the Phillipines exploit this market advantage effectively. Thailand and Malaysia are applying promotional tactics effectively to counter this potential threat to their standing as a top healthcare destination, whilst moving the map of medical tourism away from its traditional layout.


Follow me on twitter for more Daily updates

                     For more reports from Asia  www.search.dowellresearch.com

                      For any Market research consulting services  www.dowellresearch.com



Followers

Total Pageviews