Poll generates healthy coverage in media for HAW 2019

WP_Post Object
(
    [ID] => 17205
    [post_author] => 1367
    [post_date] => 2019-04-24 08:00:52
    [post_date_gmt] => 2019-04-24 07:00:52
    [post_content] => Homeopathy Awareness Week received healthy coverage across a wide range of print and online publications.

The survey conducted for 4Homeopathy which revealed the average Briton spends around £65,000 on looking and feeling good throughout a lifetime made headlines across the UK and beyond.

What we shell out on gym memberships and running gear, vitamins and supplements, prescriptions and ‘healthy’ food options helped raise the profile of homeopathy and other alternative medicines across the week ((April 10-16).

The story was covered in tabloids such as The Sun, Daily Star and Daily Express. Online, it made the news across websites ranging from The Independent and Yahoo News to Unilad (pictured) and foreign outlets such as MenaFN, the business and financial news hub based in the Middle East.

Different outlets chose to concentrate on different aspects of the survey. The line that one in 10 people might be afraid of visiting a doctor because of the potential cost implications was highlighted in FT Adviser, for example, while Europe Breaking News covered the story without mentioning Brexit once.

The Independent, meanwhile, mentioned the finding that Londoners were more inclined to worry about health issues than the more stoic Northerners.

Other appearances included Happiful, a magazine and website full of health and relationship advice and celebrity experiences of anxiety and mindfulness.

“The survey story was an effective way of raising a lot of topics important to homeopaths, often in publications that haven’t always featured us prominently or positively in the past,” said Mark Taylor, Society Chief Executive.
    [post_title] => Poll generates healthy coverage in media for HAW 2019
    [post_excerpt] => 
    [post_status] => publish
    [comment_status] => open
    [ping_status] => open
    [post_password] => 
    [post_name] => poll-generates-healthy-coverage-in-media-for-haw-2019
    [to_ping] => 
    [pinged] => 
    [post_modified] => 2019-04-23 14:50:24
    [post_modified_gmt] => 2019-04-23 13:50:24
    [post_content_filtered] => 
    [post_parent] => 0
    [guid] => https://homeopathy-soh.org/?p=17205
    [menu_order] => 0
    [post_type] => post
    [post_mime_type] => 
    [comment_count] => 0
    [filter] => raw
)

Homeopathy Awareness Week received healthy coverage across a wide range of print and online publications.

The survey conducted for 4Homeopathy which revealed the average Briton spends around £65,000 on looking and feeling good throughout a lifetime made headlines across the UK and beyond.

What we shell out on gym memberships and running gear, vitamins and supplements, prescriptions and ‘healthy’ food options helped raise the profile of homeopathy and other alternative medicines across the week ((April 10-16).

The story was covered in tabloids such as The Sun, Daily Star and Daily Express. Online, it made the news across websites ranging from The Independent and Yahoo News to Unilad (pictured) and foreign outlets such as MenaFN, the business and financial news hub based in the Middle East.

Different outlets chose to concentrate on different aspects of the survey. The line that one in 10 people might be afraid of visiting a doctor because of the potential cost implications was highlighted in FT Adviser, for example, while Europe Breaking News covered the story without mentioning Brexit once.

The Independent, meanwhile, mentioned the finding that Londoners were more inclined to worry about health issues than the more stoic Northerners.

Other appearances included Happiful, a magazine and website full of health and relationship advice and celebrity experiences of anxiety and mindfulness.

“The survey story was an effective way of raising a lot of topics important to homeopaths, often in publications that haven’t always featured us prominently or positively in the past,” said Mark Taylor, Society Chief Executive.

Share this page