And that’s a wrap for #ISBNPA2026. Thank you and congratulations to @ISBNPA for hosting such a fantastic event.
And also a big thank you to the city of Cádiz for providing such a beautiful setting for the conference.
Great to have the opportunity here at #ISBNPA2026.
Our findings highlighted a U-shaped relationship between social media use & adolescent wellbeing, with moderate use associated with the highest wellbeing.
Thanks to my coauthors and to @ISBNPA for such a fantastic conference.
I’m looking forward to presenting tomorrow (Thursday) @ISBNPA
I’ll be presenting findings from our recently published study
Session O.1.08 Children & Families, Youth Movement Behaviors & Health Outcomes
Thursday 28 May
Time 12:00–13:20
Room 7
It would be great to see you there!
Curious about the potential benefits of cold showers?
We are recruiting adults aged 18-65 years to compare a daily cold-water shower routine with usual showering.
Complete our quick eligibility survey to see if you qualify:
https://t.co/gMw9WXeXk7
🎉Congratulations to our HDA MCR Publication Award winner for 2025 - Dr @BenSinghPhD@UniofAdelaide
Ben will receive $500 for his winning publication –Evaluation of the Early Years South Australia mobile application.
Read the paper here: https://t.co/234dZQY7SF
This analysis of 100,000 (!) Australian teens suggests that moderate users of social media are happiest ("Among older adolescents (grades 10-12)…optimal well-being [was] at approximately 4 h/wk for girls and 6 h/wk for boys.") #smma https://t.co/5PhqdbHedr
Among adolescents, moderate social media use was associated with better well-being than heavy use or none, with variation by age and sex.
https://t.co/QPb5bTX8Js
Just published:
In 100,991 Australian students (Grades 4–12) followed over 3 years, there was a U-shaped pattern between social media use & wellbeing:
▶️Moderate use was associated with high wellbeing
▶️Low & high use were linked to poorer wellbeing
https://t.co/SxPTZlnosF
Among adolescents, moderate social media use was associated with better well-being than heavy use or none, with variation by age and sex. https://t.co/QJa1ST6iti
Among adolescents, moderate social media use was associated with better well-being than heavy use or none, with variation by age and sex. https://t.co/xwvHLRHUgT
After charming me over a strawberry smoothie at Vanilla Meil, look who finally convinced me to try yoga for the first time in my life.
Be sure to check out her podcast here:
https://t.co/BfJ9vrbceJ