Ozempic 24/05/24

Published May 23, 2024, 1:44 PM

Black market merchants peddling methamphetamine, ice and heroin are using Facebook posts promoting illegal vapes to funnel customers to websites and Telegram chats selling hard drugs. 

A new diabetes drug thought to be “better than Ozempic” will be trialled in Melbourne in a move researchers hope can help end global shortages. 

An Adelaide man has shared how a “fantastic holiday” with his wife came to a horrific end when their Singapore Airlines flight hit severe turbulence, sending them into freefall and leaving his wife with a serious spinal injury. 
Multimillion-dollar sobering-up centres are sitting largely empty, with just 417 people checking in over their first five months of operation. 

This is the latest from your news speech. It's Friday, the twenty fourth of May. Black market merchants peddling meth amphetamine, ice and heroine are using Facebook posts promoting illegal vapes to funnel customers to websites and telegram chats selling hard drugs. Cybersecurity experts have worn to the use of Facebook to illegally advertise vapes before sending them through to chats selling hard drugs is opening up young people to serious drug addiction. This comes after The Daily Telegraph revealed earlier this month Australian Facebook pages and Facebook Marketplace are selling vapes under the guise of grocery or health and beauty products. A new diabetes drug thought to be better than ozempic will be trialed in Melbourne in a move researchers hope can end global shortages. The new treatment can be and the active ingredient in the infamous diabetes turned weight loss drug ozempic semil gluetite with another appetite suppressant. The Royal Melbourne Hospital will offer a select group of overweight type two diabetics the treatment for free for a year under a global trial involving multiple Australian hospitals. We'll be back after this. An Adelaide man has shared how a fantastic holiday with his wife came to a horrific end when their Singapore Airline's flight hit severe turbulence, sending them into free fall and leaving his wife with a serious spinal injury. The last thing Keith Davis remembers seeing before hitting the ceiling of the cabin was his wife's glass of water starting to vibrate. The couple were returning from their first holiday to the UK since COVID when their flight from London encountered severe turbulence, plunging six thousand feet. Passenger died and more than thirty people were taken to hospital, including Miss Jordan. And multimillion dollar sobering up centers are sitting largely empty in Victoria, with just four hundred and seventeen people checking in over their first five months of operation, despite an average of only three people a day staying in the Collingwood and Saint Kilda facilities, which both are combined twenty six beds. The Allen government has committed a further fifty three point four million dollars to set up and run several more regional centers over the next two years. We'll have an update to your newsfeed tomorrow

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