Share
The sleep expert (pictured) said if you re used to leaving at 7.30am to get to work, you shouldn t abandon this just because there is no longer a need to commute If you re used to getting up at 6, going to the gym, having a coffee with your partner, kids or the yoga girls, keep it up, Olivia said (stock image)
1. KEEP UP YOUR MORNING ROUTINE
The sleep expert said if you re used to leaving at 7.30am to get to work, you shouldn t abandon this just because there is no longer a need to commute. You shouldn t be rolling from bed to breakfast to desk, Olivia posted on Instagram.
Courtesy of Cancer Council WA
We are calling on the Federal Government to take action to protect Australian kids from harmful alcohol marketing on social media, with new research showing over a quarter of Instagram accounts owned by major alcohol companies are accessible to kids.
Julia Stafford, Chair of the Cancer Council Alcohol Working Group and co-author of the research, said existing voluntary advertising codes are failing to prevent children’s access to harmful alcohol content online and must be overhauled.
“Since 2017, the industry-managed advertising code has required alcohol marketers activate age restriction controls on social networking sites to prevent children from accessing alcohol content,” Ms Stafford said.
POLICY In push to protect kids, Facebook says it will now reduce ads for teens on all its platforms
SHARE
Facebook Inc. announced today that it’s in the process of restricting advertisers from targeting people under the age of 18.
In the coming weeks, the company will ensure that advertisers won’t be able to base ads for people under 18 on their interests or their activity on other apps. These restrictions will be enforced on Instagram, Facebook and Messenger.
In the past, advertisers could target youngsters like they do anyone else, but Facebook now agrees that “young people may not be well equipped” to deal with their own ad settings. That contention was recently substantiated after reports surfaced that people as young as 13 were being targeted by alcohol companies in Australia.
Kein Qualmen mehr ab 2030 - Chef von Tabakkonzern Philip Morris fordert Zigarettenverbot
Publiziert
Kein Qualmen mehr ab 2030: Chef von Tabakkonzern Philip Morris fordert Zigarettenverbot
Im Vereinigten Königreich soll ab 2030 nicht mehr geraucht werden. Das fordert einer, der von der gesundheitsschädlichen Sucht profitiert. Dahinter steckt Kalkül.
1 / 2
Will künftig Chef eines «Gesundheits- und Wellnessanbieters» sein: Philip Moris CEO Jacek Olczak.Twitter/@j olczak
Philip Moris setzte zuletzt vermehrt auf vermeindlich «gesunde» Tabak-Lösungen wie die E-Zigaretten IQOS.Wikipedia/SimonDes / Philip Morris International
Der CEO des Tabakkonzerns Philip Morris kann sich «eine Welt ohne Zigaretten» vorstellen.
Allerdings gilt das nur für die klassischen Glimmstängel. Denn umgekehrt möchte Philip Morris seine elektronischen Tabakprodukte stärker bewerben.
2021 Student Competition for Advancing Dental Research Advancing Dental Research and its application (SCADA) winners eurekalert.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from eurekalert.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.