Log In
Register
Facebook icon
LinkedIn icon
Instagram icon
Cosmetic Ingredients
Formulas/Products
Research
Regulations
Testing
News
Leaders
Multimedia
Calendar
Home
Search
Search Cosmetics & Toiletries: Page 9
Article
Company
Document
Event
News
Podcast
Video
Webcast
Cosmetic Ingredients
Formulas/Products
Multimedia
News
Regulations
Claims/Labeling
Cruelty-free/Halal
Eco/Sustainable
Organic/COSMOS
Regional
Safety
SPF/Sun
Research
Testing
Enter search phrase
Search
419 Results
Type: Article
Section: Regulations
Regional
Brand new initiatives at in-cosmetics North America
in-cosmetics North America 2017 (New York City, 11-12 Oct), the most interactive personal care ingredient event to this date is introducing a brand new program this year.
Regional
A Century of Cosmetic Regulation [Timeline]
The modern FDA began to take shape after color additive misuse came to light in
The Jungle
. Personal care regulation has come a long way in the century that followed—Click through to learn more.
Organic/COSMOS
Rising Temperatures for the Anti-Pollution Market
What does global warming mean for personal care? As air pollution climbs worldwide, targeted personal care products are becoming more desirable to prevent premature aging and protect skin health. Formulators have their eyes on efficacy and product variations to best suit multiple skin types and ethnicities.
Claims/Labeling
The Face Value of SPF Testing: Rethinking Sun Protection Claims
Consumer safety could be at risk if SPF values are not accurately represented on product labels, providing inconsistent results in the industry. Formulators must use corroborating evidence to ensure that tested SPF values ring true, based on dependable products.
Regional
Is it Toxic? EU Mandate, Part 10: Safety
For each cosmetic product placed on the EU market, a safety evaluation must be performed. This includes a review of the toxicological profile of its ingredients, with a particular focus on genotoxicity. This mandate is described here.
Regional
Products Must Be Stable and Able: EU Mandate, Part 9
Cosmetic products need not stand up to centuries of storage under extreme conditions or in unforeseeable uses. They have a much bigger foe to face: the consumer. This ninth installment in our series explains stability requirements for products marketed in the EU.
Event Coverage
[in-cosmetics Global] Social Responsibility, Empowerment and Measuring Up
Perhaps one of the most novel aspects of sustainability presented at in-cosmetics this year was how to measure it.
Claims/Labeling
Editor's Note: Little Jars, Big Effects
Cosmetic technologies are amazing. They pack big effects into little jars and boxes whose outer labels don’t (or can’t) do them justice. If they did, nearly every U.S. marketer would be the recipient of a U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warning letter.
Claims/Labeling
Halal Regulations: Where Culture and Cosmetics Meet
For Muslims, additional rules for cosmetics are mandated by a unique source, the Quran, which implies further safety considerations related to the specific care of one's body. Halal certification, outlined here, is essentially a synonym for the careful supervision over all formula and production details, and its guarantee has gained interest from an increasing number of consumers.
SPF/Sun
Guiding Sunscreen Traffic Across the Globe
Sunscreens are classified and regulated differently around the world. For instance, the United States considers sunscreens as OTC products, while Canada has a two-part classification system; other places classify sunscreens as cosmetics. Labeling and registering differ worldwide as well. In some cases, labels require certain Drug Facts or safety registration numbers, among others. This article reviews these differences.
Regional
Cosmetovigilance and Safety Assessment in the World of Active Ingredients
It can be deduced from today's scientific literature that countless ingredients have been developed with the intent to alter the structure and function of human skin. This raises important questions in terms of how these products should be regulated and what types of safety standards they should be held to.
Regional
Are Your Preservatives Up to EU Snuff?
Clearly, cosmetics must be safe for human health. To ensure there's no mistaking just how safe, EU Cosmetics Regulation No. 1223/2009 has set forth some ground rules. Among them are microbiological considerations, which will truly challenge your preservative systems.
Regional
Brexit: Until the Divorce is Final
"Some companies decide to have one office in the UK, and another in the EU. The alternative is to provide the importer the product information file (PIF), which raises concerns over confidentiality."
Claims/Labeling
Tanning and Whitening Can Be Risky Business
Both skin tanning and whitening products, especially those not approved, can carry serious health risks. This column will review regulatory aspects of tanning products, radiation-emitting devices, skin colorants and cosmetics, drugs and supplements, and skin whiteners to make formulators aware of these risks.
Regional
3 Skin Sensitization Tests to Meet the EU Mandate
The EU Cosmetics Regulation requires skin sensitization to be determined through non-animal methods. Here, the pathways for skin sensitization are reviewed, three non-animal tests are described in brief, and their combination with one another, followed by human assessment, are explored.
Regional
Bypassing Adverse Skin Pathways: EU Rules for Cosmetics Tox Testing
Skin sensitization is one of the critical endpoints used to assess cosmetic ingredient safety, as highlighted in the EU regulation. Considerations for non-animal skin sensitization testing are discussed here.
Regional
9 EU Requirements for Risk Assessment
An ingredient's highest safe dose divided by its exposure equals its margin of safety; that's the gist of the EU's risk assessment . This sixth article in a series covers the specific requirements for risk determination.
Sun Care
Safer Solar Protection: Going Beyond UV Defense, Part I
This two-part article is controversial. In part I, it reviews a number of concerns about the safety of traditional sunscreens. In part II, scheduled for February, the authors propose new approaches to move past these issues.
Previous Page
Page 9 of 24
Next Page