Sunday 18 January 2015

Creator PR decided to plant 100 trees in Delhi-NCR

In today’s time our youth are aiming towards the ideology of Go Green. Youths are actually
participating in the trend of Go green and some are giving their best shot in maintaining the greenery around the city but still we have to take some serious steps towards maintaining greenery around us to secure the future of our coming generation. It helps to reduce air and noise pollution especially in cities like Delhi-NCR where there is so much of pollution, it is very necessary to make city green.

Keeping this in mind and with an aim to balance the eco system, Creator PR decided to plant 100 trees in Delhi-NCR this year. The company also started gifting saplings to its employees and clients in order to spread the message of GO GREEN.  

Rahul Bajpai, Founder & Managing Director, Creator PR said “This year onwards we will plant around 100 trees in Delhi NCR and will continue to do so by each year. Delhi is a beautiful city and we pledge to go green this year as this will be a small contribution from our company to create greenery in the city. With this initiative we want to spread the message of GO GREEN and plant more and more trees around the city.” 

He further added on the occasion of Creator Public Relations’ anniversary celebration that “We are thrilled to have completed another successful year of our operation and hope to continue further in a dedicated and peaceful environment.”

Creator Public Relations Pvt. Ltd., North India’s leading PR firm has completed another successful year on Jan 17, 2015. Standing on the two core principles “commitment and delivery”, Creator PR holds a strong network in Delhi-NCR and Uttar Pradesh.


Thursday 8 January 2015

How Exercise Keeps Us Young

Active older people resemble much younger people physiologically, according to a new study of the
effects of exercise on aging. The findings suggest that many of our expectations about the inevitability of physical decline with advancing years may be incorrect and that how we age is, to a large degree, up to us. Aging remains a surprisingly mysterious process. A wealth of past scientific research has shown that many bodily and cellular processes change in undesirable ways as we grow older. But science has not been able to establish definitively whether such changes result primarily from the passage of time — in which case they are inevitable for anyone with birthdays — or result at least in part from lifestyle, meaning that they are mutable.

This conundrum is particularly true in terms of inactivity. Older people tend to be quite sedentary nowadays, and being sedentary affects health, making it difficult to separate the effects of not moving from those of getting older. In the new study, which was published this week in The Journal of Physiology, scientists at King’s College London and the University of Birmingham in England decided to use a different approach.
They removed inactivity as a factor in their study of aging by looking at the health of older people who move quite a bit.

“We wanted to understand what happens to the functioning of our bodies as we get older if we take the best-case scenario,” said Stephen Harridge, senior author