Les Nouvelles Esthetiques Spa Magazine Issue # 80 2021

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spa therapies

“I'm Starting to Hate the Word Wellness” By Megan Whitby interviewing Sue Harmsworth, as part of the GWS In the Global Wellness Institute’s (GWI) latest Q&A, spa and wellness icon Sue Harmsworth spoke to VP of research and forecasting Beth McGroarty about the trends and challenges facing the spa and wellness industry. “I’m starting to hate the word wellness because it’Is become so generic it’s utterly confusing the consumer,” she began.

“Mental and cognitive health will be huge coming out of the pandemic, with depression and anxiety having risen exponentially since COVID and now affecting a third of the population globally.

In her opinion, the industry should begin differentiating between light wellness and serious wellness.

“I’m working on properties now that bring everything together: functional medicine and diagnostics, an aesthetics clinic, and all the traditional wellness, from complementary medicine to fitness to serious meditation,” she added.

“As the spa industry took off, the word and concept of wellness became confusing, and it has to do with what the US means by it, versus the rest of the world.

In her opinion, functional medicine and diagnostics will be a huge part of this trend and are important because they provide people with tangible results.

“In the US, every beauty salon, or every two treatment rooms by a pool, suddenly became a spa. When the spa movement became powerful in the 90s, stress was the overwhelming focus and most spas were built for relaxation – from massages to meditation. What I would call light wellness – with no negative connotations.

“It seems crazy, but you really can significantly impact your blood pressure or cholesterol in one week. What I want to do is to be able to programme individuals on a personalised plan with a very full set of stats so they can see their results over time.”

“But now, we have a much more complex set of modalities and advanced practitioners at wellness destinations. Plus, we also have more medical or ‘serious’ wellness.

McGroarty next touched on how the pandemic has given wellness real estate new momentum and asked Harmsworth for her thoughts on this.

“So, you have light wellness, which spas and hospitality destinations have excelled at and you have medical or serious wellness, but it’s different this time around. It’s preventative, functional medicine and diagnostics.” Ultimately, she believes the word wellness alone is too imprecise to mean anything and that spa businesses have got to focus on what their consumers want and be clear about what they’re delivering.

Integrative Wellness is the Future According to Harmsworth, an integrative approach to wellness will become standard practice due to

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the prevalence of so many lifestyle diseases in today’s society.

Growing Interest for Wellness Real-estate

"Now that’s relatively affordable," she said, "it's going to be an interesting community where everything will be grown themselves and have its own Waldorf school for the kids." She firmly champions that the way forward will be affordable and multigenerational wellness communities encompassing an entire lifestyle of wellbeing. The need for more intensive therapist training Harmsworth believes the spas that will thrive in future will be underpinned by exceptional flow, therapists, treatments, design and thermal areas, as well as great hardware, air quality and infection control. However, she urged that spa therapists and practitioners are going to have to be much better trained with deeper skills because the majority of consumers that walk in now will have some kind of contraindication. “Therapists need a much broader knowledge set to be able to deal with all the things increasingly coming their way. They’re already being bombarded with more serious issues such as diabetes, cancer, heart disease, depression and grief.

“COVID has obviously woken all of us up to working from home, and this ongoing reality will drive real growth in wellness real estate and communities. Plus, lots of people are spending a lot or all of their time in their second homes.

“This is why I’m so strong on what we’re doing in the UK with the training ruling bodies, putting modules together so that well-qualified therapists can keep adding extra modules (whether cancer or nutrition training) so they can deliver more 'wellness' than just massages or facials; be empowered to deal with the day-to-day realities they see and be set on a career path of constant skill-upgrading.

“As a consequence, more people will choose a wellness community as their primary (or near-primary) residence.”

“The spas that will take it to the next level will focus on training in a much more intensive way.”

Harmsworth believes this demand will naturally drive more projects to be conceptualised with more affordable options. She illustrated this by drawing on one of her current wellness real estate projects, where the most expensive villa costs US$1mn while artisan homes sit at US$300,000.

Be inspired...The Global Wellness Summit is an international organisation that brings together leaders and visionaries to positively impact and shape the future of the global wellness industry.

Les Nouvelles Esthetiques no’80


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Les Nouvelles Esthetiques Spa Magazine Issue # 80 2021

1min
page 34

Les Nouvelles Esthetiques Spa Magazine Issue # 80 2021

1min
page 58

The Driving Factor Behind the Business Travel Comeback

12min
pages 54-58

Stop Making This BIG Pricing Mistake

5min
pages 52-53

The Mind-Body Connection and Mental Health

3min
pages 50-51

Collaboration Strategies

10min
pages 46-47

The Secret To Success For Future Leaders? Curiosity

6min
pages 48-49

10 Actionable and Inspiring Tips for Leading Well A Small Business Owner's Guide to Effective

7min
pages 44-45

Physical Activity and Fitness Technologies: A Fast-Growing $26 Billion Global Market

3min
pages 42-43

Circular Economy Business Model?

7min
pages 38-39

Spa Design Insights on Fireplaces and Heating

4min
pages 40-41

How 'Well' Is Your Spa? Is it Possible to Keep Spa Textiles in a

3min
pages 36-37

Main Advantages of Disposable Linens for Your Business

7min
pages 34-35

Why Being Near Water Really Does Make Us Happier

12min
pages 20-23

5 Easy Ways to Use Biophilic Design to Connect with Nature

13min
pages 26-29

Sustainability Matters: Lessons Learned After Covid

3min
pages 24-25

Three Steps to Decarbonize Your Spa

8min
pages 32-33

Starting a Spa

13min
pages 12-17

Dr Desmond Fernandes For Skincare Contributions

4min
pages 10-11

The Future of Wellness

10min
pages 6-7

“I'm Starting to Hate the Word Wellness” SCFSA's Esteemed Lifetime Achievement Award Honours

5min
pages 8-9
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