Green Heals
Centella's mission is to develop, manufacture, and commercialize plant-based pharmaceutical products for the wound-healing market.
Our main product is Cotisol, an FDA regulated Homeopathic drug.
06/09/2020
Cotisol's primary use is to heal and treat, but Cotisol can also be used as an antiseptic spray to kill germs & viruses. Because we use ethyl alcohol during maceration process(extraction of ingredients from plants) Cotisol gas a titration of 89% alcohol(CDC recommends minimum of 70%)
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Cotisol is naturally aromatized- Natural aroma of rosemary and lavender smells great; it will moisturize and protect you from spreading germs and viruses. Check it out and learn more at
www.cotisol.com.
06/05/2020
Phytochemistry – Creating the best All Natural First-aid products for wound care. Continue reading https://www.cotisol.com/phytochemistry-creating-the-best-all-natural-first-aid-products-for-wound-care/
05/13/2020
Phytochemistry – Creating the best All Natural First-aid products for wound care. read more- https://www.cotisol.com/phytochemistry-creating-the-best-all-natural-first-aid-products-for-wound-care/
04/10/2020
If soap and water are not available, use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer that contains at least 60% alcohol.https://www.cdc.gov/handwashing/show-me-the-science-hand-sanitizer.html
visit www.green-heals.com to purchase sanitizing spray.
03/15/2020
Protect yourself to protect others.
visits www.green-heals.com
03/12/2020
Make sure you use skincare products with at least 60% alcohol to help kill germs and virus from spreading.
Hand sanitizer is flying off the shelves — but some of it won't work for coronavirus ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox. It’s tempting, especially now, to buy one of the many hand sanitizers whose label says it “kills 99.99% of illness causing germs.” But that does n...
03/09/2020
Hand sanitizer has become a scarce commodity as Covid-19 circles the world.
A quick search on Amazon’s US site reveals that even the e-commerce giant is completely out of stock of the instant disinfectant, aside from a few third-party sellers. An 8-ounce bottle of Purell, which is normally $2.50 on the Amazon Fresh grocery delivery service, is being sold at nearly 20 times that rate by opportunists.
And the shortage is not just online: Buyers who turned to Amazon’s main competitors, Walmart and Target, found the same. Unlike Amazon, a product ordered on Walmart or Target’s online portals can be shipped from the nearest brick-and-mortar store or a network of distribution centers and warehouses. Virtually every brand of hand sanitizer, from a 2-ounce grapefruit-scented spray by The Honest Company to Purell wipes, are unavailable for shipping on Target. On Walmart’s site, most options for both shipping and in-store pickup have been wiped out.
The fact that hand sanitizer is sold out on Amazon and third party sellers are raising their prices is an indicator of trouble, according to Glenn Richey, a professor in supply chain management at Auburn University. “Since Amazon provides access to products via their supply chain, as well as the supply chains of third party providers, we can expect that the third party suppliers are low on inventory and working to maximize their revenue before they are out of product and likely cut off from consistent resupply,” Richey wrote in an email to Quartz.
Once Amazon is sold out of an item, third-party sellers have no incentive to keep their price down in order to compete with the retailer. Both Amazon and Walmart, for their part, have made an effort to cut down on price-gouging related to Covid-19. But it appears to be a game of whack-a-mole for both companies, and those with a sharp eye can still find an expensive bottle of Purell or two up for sale.
Something selling out on Amazon is usually the first sign of a spike in demand that spreads to brick-and-mortar store fronts, according to Nick Vyas, executive director for the Center for Global Supply Chain Management at the University of Southern California. “The first place that you would go is Amazon. And after that you’ll start to scout around your local, second-tier, brick and mortar options,” he says.
True to form, both CVS and Walgreens reported last week (Feb. 28) that demand for hand sanitizers had spiked, and CVS even warned it could cause supply shortages. Users on social media are reporting shortages across the US, from big box stores like Costco and Sam’s Club to drugstore chains and grocery stores.
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Address
Palm Beach Gardens, FL
33418
Opening Hours
| Monday | 9am - 5pm |
| Tuesday | 9am - 5pm |
| Wednesday | 9am - 5pm |
| Thursday | 9am - 5pm |
| Friday | 9am - 5pm |
| Saturday | 10am - 6pm |