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206. Time for policies on gambling to benefit health ‐ not the gambling industry.

207. "You don't really see the dangers of it at the time." Risk perceptions and behaviours of older female gamblers.

208. Shaping more resilient and just food systems: Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic.

209. 'Everyone knows grandma'. Pathways to gambling venues in regional Australia.

210. Parent and child perceptions of gambling promotions in Australian sport.

211. Exploring children's experiences in community gambling venues: A qualitative study with children aged 6-16 in regional New South Wales.

212. Inter-sectoral Transfer of the Food for Life Settings Framework in England.

213. Youth perspectives on the promotional and public relations strategies of health harming industries.

214. Australian parents' perceptions of the risks posed by harmful products to the health of children.

215. Developing structures to support researchers studying health-harming industries.

216. Community sports leaders' perceptions of the risks and benefits of gambling sponsorship in community sport.

218. The role of alcohol consumption in the lives of older Australian women: qualitative insights and an agenda for further research, policy and practice.

219. Unhealthy and health promoting sponsorship of male and female professional sporting teams in Australia.

220. "It's changing our lives, not for the better. It's important that we have a say". The role of young people in informing public health and policy decisions about gambling marketing.

221. "Older people will die of old age. I'll die of climate change": engaging children and young people in climate decision making for public health.

222. Methodological and practical guidance for designing and conducting online qualitative surveys in public health.

223. 'You can't really separate these risks, our environment, our animals and us': Australian children's perceptions of the risks of the climate crisis.

224. Children, young people and the Commercial Determinants of Health.

225. Adolescent sexual and reproductive health and rights for ethnic minority girls in Vietnam.

226. Australian youth perspectives on the role of social media in climate action.

227. Australian young people's perspectives about the political determinants of the climate crisis.

229. "It shows we are serious": Young people in Australia discuss climate justice protests as a mechanism for climate change advocacy and action.

230. "Drugs and alcohol get talked about, why not betting?" Young men's qualitative insights about strategies to prevent gambling harm.

231. A scoping review of the individual, socio-cultural, environmental and commercial determinants of gambling for older adults: implications for public health research and harm prevention.

232. "Aussies love a bet": Gamblers discuss the social acceptance and cultural accommodation of gambling in Australia.

233. Young people in Australia discuss strategies for preventing the normalisation of gambling and reducing gambling harm.

234. Young men's perceptions about the risks associated with sports betting: a critical qualitative inquiry.

235. "I always walked out with an empty purse." Older adults' engagement with electronic gambling machines in Victoria, Australia.

236. Young people's reflections on the factors contributing to the normalisation of gambling in Australia.

237. 'It's a tradition to go down to the pokies on your 18th birthday' - the normalisation of gambling for young women in Australia.

238. The development and implementation of electronic gambling machine policy: a qualitative study of local government policy makers.

239. Weighing up the risks and benefits of community gambling venues as recreational spaces for people with lifelong disability.

240. Do betting advertisements contain attention strategies that may appeal to children? An interpretative content analysis.

241. What do children observe and learn from televised sports betting advertisements? A qualitative study among Australian children.

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