Chemist Warehouse Catalogue - 13/12-23/12/2022 (Page 4)

Products in this catalogue


wellness this month wellness amsel be happy holidays in this issue how to stay water safe relaxed and radiant how jacqui felgate found her happy place cossie confidence be beach brave embrace the festive spirit new traditions and wise pet choices bursting with simple recipes from poh ling yeow arm workout body blitz sultry beauty and tanning tips night routine glowing results with drowning deaths the highest in more than 25 years make sure you don't become a statistic this summer words liz mcgrath hundreds of lives lost each year to drowning and many more families affected by the long-term injury of a loved one the latest report from the royal life that between july 1 last year and 30 june highest in more than 25 years an estimated further 686 others experienced a non-fatal drowning accident rlssa national manager of research and policy stacey pidgeon says drowning deaths most frequently occur in the old a high-risk group "males are way overrepresented at 82 factor particularly with men." she adds that covid has added to restrictions changed our routines and impacted our lifestyles "kids weren't able to go to swimming classes and many swimming schools were get to the pools for their regular swimming exercise," she says "our report showed 15 drowning deaths occurred in children aged five to 14 years the fundamental water safety benchmarks." the latest statistics show 114 drowning deaths occurred in rivers and creeks and "people were travelling to more remote tune into wellness tv keep afloat here are stacey's tips for always supervise children make sure someone knows avoid drinking alcohol around water always wear a lifejacket when boating and fishing know the conditions "don't drive through signs when you go to the beach and always swim at the flags and be aware of are very different to a beach." stacey says swimming outside of patrolled hours or stacey says "heavy rain and flooding meant there was also unexpected exposure to water not aware of how to respond to changing conditions." those conditions look set to continue with above-average rainfall predicted for eastern australia over early summer thanks to the country's third consecutive la nina weather event for our guide on how to safely have fun in summer scan here exte01z01cw-vo