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AAP
AAP
Politics
Luke Costin

Father of late teen leads call for social media change

Liv Evans, pictured with her father Robb, died by her own hand after a battle with anorexia. (HANDOUT/ROBB EVANS)

Sparked by schoolyard bullying and fanned by Instagram.

That's how Robb Evans sees his late daughter's battle with anorexia nervosa, which ended in tragedy in April 2023.

"The claws were in so deeply she couldn't see a place to recover," he said of his 15-year-old, clutching her urn under his right arm.

While the Victorian dad still searches for clarity on what his daughter was exposed to, the posts she was comfortable showing him included advice on masking illness with water and clothing.

Man holds daughter's urn in front of wall saying '36 months'
Liv's father Robb Evans wants social media limits lifted from 13 to 16 years of age. (Luke Costin/AAP PHOTOS)

"It got more sinister in how few calories could you consume in a day to live," he said.

"She was searching for this content and then being presented with more and more of it."

Through his grief, Mr Evans has thrown his energy behind a campaign to force teenagers under the age of 16 off social media.

Meta and TikTok allow children as young as 13 onto their platforms, though each cannot easily verify ages.

The 36 Months campaign co-led by media personality Michael "Wippa" Wipfli has also won support from comedian Hamish Blake, Hollywood actor Tahyna MacManus, business, academics and parents.

A petition signed by 110,000 people was presented to NSW parliament on Wednesday.

Even without platforms implementing a "very simple" technical method to verify age, enacting a legal minimum would empower young teens to stay away and parents to enforce bans, supporters say.

Wipfli denied mounting an attack on social media, saying Australia needed to acknowledge young children were more vulnerable to doom-scrolling and other key features of Instagram and TikTok.

"We need it (change) now - there are kids on the edge so we don't have time to waste," Wipfli said.

Eating disorder experts say teenagers need more time to develop without the influence of social media and want a ban for under-16s among other changes.

"The teenage years are the most prevalent age of onset for an eating disorder in Australia," the Australia and New Zealand Academy for Eating Disorders told a federal inquiry.

"Due to the loop of content reinforcing appearance ideals, control of eating etc. the algorithm can reinforce challenges related to the development of an eating disorder and treatment seeking and recovery."

Parliamentary inquiry into social media
A federal parliamentary inquiry is examining social media while NSW will hold a summit in October. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS)

Instagram's parent company says it has spent more than US$5 billion ($A7.5 billion) on safety and security in the past year alone.

Teens who search for content related to eating disorders or body image issues now see a pop-up with tips and an easy way to connect with support organisations such as the Butterfly Foundation.

"We have developed - and continue to review and update - our approach to eating disorder content in consultation with experts around the world," Meta has told a federal social media inquiry.

Age verification for the online purchase of alcohol has been trialled in NSW, with that state government flagging that it could inform similar pilots for social media.

A state-run summit in October is hoped to generate innovative solutions to the challenges of social media.

Mr Evans said quiet kids like his daughter needed to be protected.

"She was so loving and kind, very creative, loved animals and never had a bad word to say about anyone," he said.

"I obviously miss her every day."

Lifeline 13 11 14

Kids Helpline 1800 55 1800 (for people aged 5 to 25)

Butterfly Foundation 1800 334 673

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