Is Our Drinking Water Healthy And What Is Healthy Water
What makes the water you drink “healthy water”? Most of us know that there is problem with some of our drinking water – sometimes it is the taste, other times it’s the smell. But what ever it is, most of us don’t believe that our drinking water is healthy.
It’s estimated 60% to 80% of all cancers are environmental in origin. Several studies have demonstrated the presence of chemical carcinogens in surface, ground water, and municipal treated drinking water.
However, often overlooked are the beneficial properties in drinking water that can help protect us from cancer – namely total dissolved solids (TDS), hardness, and pH.
Drinking waterwith higher amounts of TDS and hardness results in lower heart disease and cancer mortality rates.
Fluoridation is a highly emotional and controversial issue in which it is difficult to separate fact from fiction. The bottom line: Is it effective? Is it safe?
Fluoride toxicity has been linked to genetic damage in plants and animals, birth defects in humans, plus a series of allergic reactions ranging from fatigue, headaches, urinary tract irritations, diarrhea and many other problems.
Dr. Dean Burk, former researcher with the National Cancer Institute, claims “one tenth of all cancer deaths in this country can be shown to be linked to fluoridation of public drinking water.”
Worldwide there is very little fluoridation. Countries that start usually end up stopping it.
Is the chlorine found in our water used for drinking is developing both cancer and atherosclerosis? In the late 1960s Joseph Price, MD, wrote a fascinating, yet largely ignored book entitled, “Coronaries, Cholesterol, Chlorine.”
His experiments clearly demonstrate that “the basic cause of atherosclerosis and heart attacks and most common forms of strokes is chlorine. The chlorine contained in drinking water.”
Can chlorine be linked to cancer too? Chlorine combines with natural organic matter creating cancer-causing trihalomethanes (THMs).
Studies from Louisiana, New York, Maryland, and Ohio reveal where there are higher levels of THMs there are higher levels of cancer. Proper water filtration systems can remove these carcinogens.
Bottled water is big business. Normally bottled water tastes better than of the usual tap water. But is it “healthy water?” It depends on several factors.
Is it hard? Is it moderately high in TDS (total dissolved solids)? Most bottled waters in the United States do not give the information you need to answer these questions. Most of the bottled waters are processec water using reverse osmosis, distillation, filtration or de-ionization. Frankly, you can do this yourself and save money.
Of the more than 700 brands of bottled water available in the US, around 80% are processed water.
Purchase only bottled natural spring or artesian well waters that come closest to the “healthy water” criteria hardness 170 mg/l and TDS around 300 mg/l.
Another “healthy water” option is using an effective filter. Mediocre, excellent, and poor filters are easily available out in the market. Most states require 3rd party testing of water products; however, most people have difficulty understanding the results.
Preliminary research suggests that the ingestion of harmful chemicals from drinking water may not be the primary exposure.
Skin absorption rates for toxic chemicals in both children and adults are much higher than from oral ingestion for toluene, ethyl benzene, and styrene.Â
Inhalation during showering of TCE (trichloroethylene) was 6 to 80 times greater than from drinking the water. People who are fond of hot tubs and pools take note.
One solution to consider is a whole-house filtration system for chemical removal, not mineral extraction. Point of use filters for bathing, showering, and drinking are also recommended.
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