Health⚠ unverified · 20%
The sharp rise in youth inactivity since the pandemic corresponds very closely to the deterioration in young people’s health since 2019. In 2019, 14 per cent of 18-24-year-olds said they had a long-te
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Unverified, machine-classified. This event was auto-detected from a single BLUESKY news source. The title is a machine-generated label — not the article’s headline — and may not reflect the source. Open the source to confirm; treat as a developing signal until verified.
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- outbreak · pandemic
The sharp rise in youth inactivity since the pandemic corresponds very closely to the deterioration in young people’s health since 2019. In 2019, 14 per cent of 18-24-year-olds said they had a long-term health condition which limits their activity; by 2025 this had risen to 21 per cent.
Sources
- Bluesky ↗ · first seen 2026-06-15 14:45 UTC
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Correlated events
Computed by the Defaxon correlation engine — linked by shared actors, co-location, and temporal proximity. Scored hypotheses, never causal claims.