Skip to main content

Home Care > Airiz Night use

Airiz Night use
Tiens Group has always provided good-quality products to global consumers, and has made strategic alliance with many first-class enterprises in the world. The innovative AIRIZ sanitary napkin is popular in the world, enabling women to have top-quality life with health, happiness, beauty and wealth.

AIRIZ active oxygen & negative ion soft cotton sanitary napkin (Day use & Night use) With silk-thin soft cotton surface layer, it is comfortable, sanitary, absorbent and breathable. In addition, it has professionally designed flow layer, and active oxygen & negative ion chips, which have such roles as preventing gynecologic diseases, adjusting blood circulation, enhancing immunity, sterilizing and eliminating odor. Ultrathin design as well as powerful water absorption and water locking make you feel more comfortable and refreshed.
 
Menstrual period can be divided into three stages, and women can use different sizes of sanitary napkins accordingly. When the amount of menstrual blood is large, you can use the sanitary napkin with wings in daytime and the sanitary napkin (night use) at night; you can use standard sanitary napkin when the amount of menstrual blood is not very large; and you can use ultrathin sanitary napkin or panty liner before and after menstrual period. Such portfolio is not only safe and comfortable, but also saves the expense in menstrual period.

Feminine health self-examination card as a detached gift 

The card is used to check product effect (by comparing before-use and after-use situation) and examine genitals, being the health self-examination card produced with the latest technology. You only need to dip the secretion at vaginal orifice with the test point on the card and compare the color with color chart when the test point changes color in 30 seconds.

"AiRiZ" feminine health self-examination card gives you more care and makes you health

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Global Health Issues

Global Health Issues        Info: Despite incredible improvements in health since 1950, there are still a number of challenges, which should have been easy to solve. Consider the following....     One billion people lack access to health care systems... 36 million deaths each year are caused by noncommunicable diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes and chronic lung diseases. This is almost two-thirds of the estimated 56 million deaths each year worldwide. (A quarter of these take place before the age of 60.) Cardiovascular diseases (C V Ds) are the number one group of conditions causing death globally. An estimated 17.5 million people died from C V Ds in 2005, representing 30% of all global deaths. Over 80% of C V D deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries. Over 7.5 million children under the age of 5 die from malnutrition and mostly preventable diseases, each year. In 2008, some 6.7 million people died of infectious diseases alone, far more than the

World Education Report

The World Education Information Report’s focus on education as a basic human right is a fitting choice for the International Year for the Culture of Peace. Education is one of the principal means to build the‘defenses of peace’ in the minds of men and women everywhere – the mission assumed by UNESCO when the Organ- ization was created more than half a century ago. The twentieth century saw human rights accepted worldwide as a guiding principle. Our ambition for the new century must be to see human rights fully implemented in practice.       This is therefore a good moment for the inter- national community to reflect on its understand- ing of, and commitment to, the right to edu- cation. Education is both a human right and a vital means of promoting peace and respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms gener- ally. If its potential to contribute towards build- ing a more peaceful world is to be realized, edu- cation must be made universally available an equally accessible to all

Tips for Health Care and Guide

Professionals. Guidance notes on the Muslim fast during Ramadan The Muslim fast during the month of Ramadan provides  an opportunity for health professionals to promote  health improvement among Muslims by offering lifestyle  advice on topics such as diet and smoking cessation.        It is important to recognize  that the Muslim community,  like any other, is diverse. This results in differences of  perception and practice among Muslim patients. The  start of Ramadan advances 11 days every year as it is  based on a lunar calendar and will sometimes fall in the  summer months, resulting in a more onerous fast than  when it is in the winter months. In 2007 Ramadan starts  in mid-September.      Fasting during Ramadan is intended as a discipline and  requires abstinence from anything taken orally during  the hours of daylight, each consecutive day for a month.  This includes water and smoking. Bleeding will also  preclude the fast for that day. Fasti