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			 The U.S. No 2 drugstore chain, part of CVS Health Corp, is the first 
			major American company to adopt such a policy in the face of rising 
			concerns about doctored images setting unrealistic ideals of beauty, 
			especially for young women. 
 The retailer said on Thursday that 70 percent of all in-store beauty 
			imagery was now flagged as "beauty unaltered" or "digitally 
			altered." The company announced its "Beauty Mark" initiative a year 
			ago, but only on Thursday did it appear in stores.
 
 CVS has promised that by 2020 all images in its stores nationwide 
			will be marked. The policy has already been applied to all images on 
			CVS.com and in marketing materials, including on social media, the 
			company said.
 
			
			 
			Neutrogena, CoverGirl, and Revlon are among 13 brands working with 
			CVS on the policy, the company said. Celebrities and others paid to 
			promote products on social media are required to post only 
			unaltered, unfiltered images.
 CVS was the first U.S. drugstore chain to take cigarettes off the 
			shelf in 2014, a decision it says reduced smoking.
 
 "We believe by not putting significantly altered images in our 
			stores, it's aligning to what our customers want and expect to see," 
			said Kevin Hourican, president of CVS Pharmacy. He said he expected 
			the move to attract more millennial shoppers.
 
			
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			Actress Kerry Washington has been a part of the Beauty Mark 
			initiative since its inception. 
			"I know firsthand what it looks like to wake up in the morning and 
			look at the cover of a magazine and say, 'Who is that? Why did some 
			person at a computer change the shape of my face to appease their 
			own idea of what I should look like when that is not who I am?'," 
			she told Reuters.
 Other brands that have committed to marking their images as altered 
			or not include: Olay, Almay, Aveeno, Rimmel, JOAH, L'Oreal, 
			Maybelline, Unilever, Burt's Bees and Physicians Formula.
 
 CVS is the third-most popular U.S. retailer of skin care and 
			cosmetics products, behind Walmart Inc and Target Corp, according to 
			Coresight Research.
 
 (Reporting by Melissa Fares in New York; Editing by Bill Rigby)
 
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