Dr. Oz explains new alcohol guidelines: ‘Don’t have it for breakfast’

















New guidelines push Health Secretary Kennedy’s ‘Make America Healthy Again’ agenda

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Coffee chain has followed in Starbucks’ footsteps with addition of protein-based menu

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A campaign group of health professionals is urging parents to stop surveilling their children. I couldn’t agree more
News just in: the sky is blue, water is wet, and tracking our kids’ every move with phones or AirTags is causing a “deeply concerning” increase in anxiety among young people, according to more than 70 psychologists, doctors, nurses and health professionals who have come together to urge parents to “reconsider whether the surveillance childhood we are sleepwalking into is really benefiting our children”. They add: “We are implicitly telling them that the world is unsafe,” and warn that constant monitoring prevents kids learning the skills and developing the autonomy necessary to navigate real life.
“It’s so normal to want to keep our children safe,” says Clare Fernyhough, co-founder of campaign group Generation Focus. “But there is no evidence that tracking makes them any safer.”
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Ashenafei Demisse’s vehicle suddenly moved forward and killed Fareer Amir and his own 12-year-old son Raphael

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Venezuela’s interim president maintains she is in charge of the government in Caracas

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