
'Photoshopped' skin in 20 minutes? The £19 eye masks being hailed a skincare game-changer - users say they reduce wrinkles and dark circles 'INSTANTLY'
For a quick skin smoothing and lifting treatment on demand, shoppers are turning to these under-£20 eye masks, calling them their 'best skincare discovery'.
The Eye Patches from Augustinus Bader are clinically proven to lift, tighten and firm the eye area, with the skin under the eye looking noticeably plumper and rejuvenated after just one use.
Augustinus Bader The Eye Patches - single pack £19
Whether you've had a bad night's sleep or are looking to smooth lines and increase hydration ahead of a big event, these under-eye patches are the 'miraculous' skincare hack you'll want to get your hands on.
Priced at £19 per pair or £105 for a pack of six, the Eye Patches work get to work immediately to fix a myriad of under-eye concerns - from minimising the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles to reducing undereye bags and puffiness.
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Augustinus Bader The Hydrogel Face Mask - single pack £25
The Hydrogel Face Mask is another must-buy from Augustinus Bader, designed to instantly hydrate, even, and plump, while reducing the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles for a replenished glow.
Powered by TFC8® technology, this face mask is clinically proven to improve skin hydration by 95 per cent after just one use, also leaving skin 42 per cent more luminous.
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The perfect way to spruce up your skin fast, Augustinus Bader's effective Eye Patches have quickly become a top seller for the brand thanks to their impressive instant results, with users raving of the 'immediate difference' they make.
'This is a miraculous invention,' raved one impressed reviewer. 'It's like a dream. I pop the patches on and 20 mins later my under-eye area is photoshopped. I have ordered the 6-patches-pack and set it to replenish.'
Joining the cult Rich Cream as one of Augustinus Bader's top sellers, the Eye Patches are well-loved for a reason, delivering instant and long-term smoothing, firming and brightening results with just one 20-minute application.
Whether you've had a bad night's sleep or are looking to smooth lines and increase hydration ahead of a big event, these under-eye patche s are the 'miraculous' skincare hack you'll want to get your hands on.
Priced at £19 per pair or £105 for a pack of six, the Eye Patches get to work immediately to fix a myriad of under-eye concerns - from minimising the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles to reducing undereye bags and puffiness.
And with clinical and user trials to back up the brand's claims, these gel patches are worth their weight in gold.
Clinical results show that after four weeks of use, the eye patches increased skin elasticity by a whopping 207 per cent and skin firmness by 166 per cent.
Better yet, after just one use, 85 per cent of users agreed their eye area looked lifted, tighter and firmer, while 79 per cent agreed their eye area puffiness was reduced.
This is all thanks to Augustinus Bader's Trigger Factor Complex known as TFC8® technology that powers the patches. This powerhouse ingredient is made out of natural amino acids, high-grade vitamins and synthesized molecules to support the skin's innate potential for renewal.
Proven to address specific concerns like wrinkles, redness and hyperpigmentation, shoppers have seen great results from The Eye Patches - and fast.
'These eye patches work better than anything I've ever tried. I can't believe the results start to stay with you and now they are all the time! Absolutely incredible.' Raved one impressed reviewer.
'I use The Eye Patches once per week and I have noticed an improvement to the elasticity of the skin under the eyes.' Added another. 'The skin is better hydrated and the fine wrinkles diminished.'
Want equally as smoothing and rejuvenating results on the whole of your face? The Hydrogel Face Mask is another must-buy from Augustinus Bader, designed to instantly hydrate, even and plump the skin while reducing the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles for a replenished glow.
Also powered by TFC8® technology, this face mask is clinically proven to improve skin hydration by 95 per cent after just one use, also leaving skin 42 per cent more luminous.
Better still, in user results after just one use, 78 per cent agreed their skin appeared firm and lifted, 90 per cent agreed their skin texture looked and felt smoother, and 82 per cent agreed their skin looked healthier and renewed.
Ready to upgrade your skincare routine? Snap up the Eye Patches and Hydrogel Face Mask today and achieve your smoothest, healthiest complexion yet.
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Daily Mail
16 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Doctors dismissed my symptoms as a sinus infection... a year later I found out I had a deadly brain tumor
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She underwent multiple surgeries to seal off the blood vessel feeding the tumor in the hopes of preventing it from growing larger, followed by a procedure to remove the mass in its entirety. 'It's only when I look back in time and think through those appointments and the conversations, and I was at the point where I was begging people to believe me,' Ruhoy told 'The sad part is that if someone had believed me earlier on, I think I could have prevented a lot of the recurrences that I had to go through because I've now undergone three rounds of radiation to my brain.' Ruhoy was healthy before her medical crisis, like many of her current patients. She questioned how this could have happened, feeling she had done everything right. During her quest for answers, Ruhoy complained of light sensitivity and severe, long-lasting migraines that doctors told her were due to her stressful job as a neurologist in a hospital. She said one doctor stayed glued to their computer and failed to even make eye contact with her. Another told her, after she begged for an MRI because she knew something was wrong, that he 'didn't want to feed into the hysteria by ordering an MRI.' She said 'Looking back, I think that I just wasn't cognizant of what was really happening when it was happening. 'And it's only when I look back in time and think through those appointments and basically I was at the point where I was like begging people to believe me, because things just were getting worse for me.' Around nine months into her illness, before being diagnosed, she found a primary care doctor and as soon as Ruhoy walked into her new doctor's office, she began to sob, telling the physician that she had reached her wit's end. 'All I said was, please, just order me an MRI. And she said the famous words, "when a neurologist asks you to order a brain MRI, you order a brain MRI,"' Ruhoy said. 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People with poorly understood chronic illnesses fed by exposure to certain medications, pathogens, or trauma generally describe feeling 'gaslit' by their doctors who don't adequately listen to their concerns, often brush them off as being due to stress, give up trying to treat patients, and alienate them. She vowed to help patients who have felt let down by the medical establishment and to not allow them to leave her office without setting forth on the path to recovery. PEIs encompass several diagnoses marked by a wide array of symptoms. According to Ruhoy, exposure can be to anything external and does not always involve an infection. For instance, she said, long-term exposure to pesticides or mold have been linked to cases of Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis, and chronic fatigue syndrome. Her newfound career treating PEIs began with Danielle, a dancer in her early 30s who developed debilitating joint pain, food allergies, hives, swelling in her hands and feet, dizziness, headaches, and neck pain. Many of her patients today are on their fourth or fifth healthcare professional in their quest to figure out what is driving their symptoms. Danielle was no different. She asked Danielle a laundry list of questions, questions no doctor had asked her before: Did she ever have any pain disorders? Did family members have similar symptoms to hers? Did she choke a lot? Did she have chest pain? A detailed blood test revealed Danielle's hypothyroidism, missed by other doctors who hadn't ordered a comprehensive panel. This likely caused her fatigue, menstrual issues, hair loss, bloating, and skin changes. Dr Ruhoy addressed each symptom: an MRI uncovered a misdiagnosed spinal problem, treated with muscle relaxants; medication stabilized her dizziness; and specialists managed her heart and joint pain. Within months, Danielle felt significantly better. In addition to treating patients' symptoms with medication, Ruhoy recommends drug-free treatments: being active, even for a short walk, time in nature, and following a consistent sleep schedule. 'Will you ever be 'normal' again? It's a question I hear often from patients, and unfortunately— if by 'normal' you mean a full return to the person you were before this chronic illness... I can't promise that you will,' Ruhoy wrote in her book Invisible No More. 'However, if you care for yourself, if you remain diligent in the ways we have discussed, and if you attend to your body and listen to the signals it sends you… then you have a great chance of being well. Very well, even.'


Daily Mail
18 hours ago
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Daily Mail
19 hours ago
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I gave up my dream at 29 to look after my sick mom - three things no one tells you about caring for a relative
Simone Heng was at the peak of her career in Dubai when she got a phone call from her sister while she was working a giveaway at the mall for her radio job. 'Simone, where are you?' her sister asked from Perth, Australia. 'I think you should come home.' Her mother had a stroke related to her rare genetic condition and was suffering from paralysis. They had found her mother lying at the bottom of the shower. They had no idea how long she had been there. 'I'll never forget that,' Simone, 41, told Daily Mail. 'I remember just that guilt of like - how long was she at the bottom of the shower? How long until someone knocked the door down?' As she hopped on a flight from Dubai to Perth, she knew her life was about to change. That trip in 2013 was only supposed to be two weeks long, but when she looked at her mother lying in her hospital bed, looking gray with eyes unable to focus and suffering from arm spasms, she knew things were not going to get any better. 'I remember seeing her in that state and going: "Your life is going to change forever now,"' she told Daily Mail. 'I'm the shield now, and I think that's really when we, as children, become our parent's parent, and the role flips.' At 29, Simone, an international broadcaster who worked at Virgin Radio Dubai, embarked on a 1.5-year journey of caretaking, one filled with such isolation and grief that it knocked her off her feet. Now, she has penned a book called Let's talk About Loneliness and hopes to warn others of the unexpected toll of caring for an ill parent. Simone packed her bags and headed back home to Perth while they moved her mother in a care facility. Despite the help, Simone and her sister were left to deal with their mother's belongings at her home and figure out the logistics of unexpectedly having to care for their parent. The sisters split the work. Her sister would focus on the logistics of care - physiotherapy costs, arranging massages, and subsidizing help - while Simone would take care of the emotional aspects, such as bringing her mother happiness. But the first obstacle Simone faced, however, was being in charge of downsizing her mother's home. And it's now the foremost thing she'd tell others going through the same thing: 'Number one, if your parents are still cognitive and you can convince them to downsize, please do it. 'The last thing you need is the logistical nightmare of cleaning that house when they're already incapacitated.' Despite her mom being in a wheelchair, her mind was there and it held fast to her beloved items, causing 'friction' between the mother and daughter. 'The brain hadn't degenerated yet. The body was in a wheelchair, but the brain was fighting about the belongings and things like that,' Simone told Daily Mail. Your life is going to change forever now. I'm the shield now, and I think that's really when we, as children, become our parent's parent, and the role flips Author Simone Heng The second thing she found herself unexpectedly experiencing was watching her mother go from a fully capable adult to needing the same level of help as a child. 'I saw my mom's nappy being changed in front of me,' she said. 'You have to prepare yourself for when that change happens, when they become the baby - especially if you have very authoritarian parents like I did with mom.' 'You emotionally need to prepare yourself for that loss of dignity and watching them kind of melt down. And I wish I had been prepared for that. I wish someone else had said: "Look, you need to just watch out for this."' But her biggest problem, and third thing she warns people about when they are beginning to look after a relative, is the isolation of caregiving. She woke up every day thinking only of her mom and her needs. As time went on, Simone lost herself. She stopped putting on makeup and stopped caring how she looked. 'By the end of the one and a half years, I just completely didn't even look in a mirror anymore,' she said. And for Simone, who wasn't even 30 at the time, she felt so alone in the world of caregiving. Only now, as her friends enter their 40s, are they beginning to experience what she went through a decade ago. And unlike death, where the heart heals with time and the physical burden gets lighter, it doesn't with chronic illness. 'You see it at the beginning with - when dad passed away, people brought food. They understood that someone had passed away. And eventually it's finite,' she explained to Daily Mail. 'When someone has that long-term chronic illness, there is really no endpoint. And so the community is amazing at the beginning, but really long-term, it's on you as the children.' And her own family perceived her as young and vibrant and fully capable of handling the pressures and duties of caretaking. But all it did to her was make her feel 'incredibly, incredibly lonely.' She still, to this day, feels guilt for the resentment she felt at the time and grieves for the version of herself that she lost. In Dubai she was a highly successful broadcaster whose face was easily recognizable in the emirate. She once featured on a billboard for Dove outside the 7-star Burj Al Arab hotel. 'I grieved it for years afterwards. I think in the moment you're just in fight or flight, and I was culturally conditioned to think that this is what good Asian daughters do, and this is unquestioned,' she said. 'And it had been taught to me from the time I was young. My mom had said it to me over and over again: "You know we don't put our people in homes." This is what you do. 'And so I was unquestioning in that kind of obedience of programming. But it wasn't until I realized how much the whole experience changed me at a cellular level, and when I went back to work.' Simone fled Perth for Singapore after a year and a half. She had hit her breaking point and a psychiatrist told her she had to leave before it was too late. 'My mental health got really bad,' she said. 'The psych just said: "You know you're not born to do this," and that's why [I left]. 'I still carry guilt this day that I'm not made of better stuff, more selfless stuff, and he's like: "You know, you've got to put the face mask on. You're a creative, and you need to go back to a place where you can do that." She chose Singapore due to its proximity to Australia, allowing her to return every 90 days to visit her mother. Her sister, who still lives in Australia, now does the brunt of the caregiving, but for Simone, this system works better. 'It's still difficult, you know, undoing that guilt and that programming,' Simone told Daily Mail. From 2015 to 2017, Simone went to therapy to work through the experience and was able to come out on the other side. Now, she advises children who become caretakers to join support groups and to give themselves grace for the guilt they feel. 'Give yourself grace,' she said. Despite how difficult the experience was, it gave her a perspective that is now her 'north star.' 'No one is talking about their job, how much money they earn, like what watch they have,' she said. 'People are just pining away for human connection. And I think that that was very inspiring to the work that I do now, we're really just here for connection and a good time. 'And that, that I carry every day. It kind of is the north star of how I make all my decisions.'