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Sept. 2008:Omega-3s

August 2008: Water

July 2008: Eggs

June 2008:Mushrooms

May 2008: Fish

April 2008: Oils

March 2008: Millet

August 2008 Newsletter: Nutrition Matters

Tip of the month: http://www.byronkatie.com/newsletter_april_08.html

A neuroscience researcher found herself having a stroke and describes it in this 20 minute video – very moving and also informative for those who might have a stroke or live with someone who might.

Water

A recent issue of Nutrition Action publishes an interview with Dr. Heinz Valtin, retired professor at Dartmouth Medical School, debunking the eight-glasses-of-water-a-day myth.  He claims that all liquids are equally liquid, i.e., that coffee and alcohol are not less so because of any dehydrating quality. So, if he is right, where does that leave us?  How much water is enough water?  And how much is too much?

There seems to be general agreement that enough is when urine is not dark yellow (unless colored by vitamin B supplementation).  If you get thirsty, that is an early warning signal and should be heeded.  Too much is also a possibility, as several sad cases of athletes have made known.  Sweating depletes sodium; large quantities of water after much sweating can leave you without enough sodium to feel well – or maybe even to survive.

So you know more or less how to drink enough and not too much – but of what kind of water?  Tap? Bottled? Filtered? Distilled?  Tap water standards are set by the EPA, which claims that 90% of public water meets those standards.  The EPA will give names of local certified labs, should you want to have your tap water tested: www.epa.gov/safewater/labs.  Or you could invest in the Watersafe All-In-One Drinking Water Test Kit: $20 at www.h2okits.com/site/1286521/product/WS-425B.  Don’t forget that your municipality is obliged by law to give you its analysis of your tap water; but the quickest route is to visit www.org/tapwater/yourwater/system where this information is available through the watch-dog Environmental Working Group.  If you are wondering about filters, be sure the one you get deals with the contaminants your water has, e.g., carbon filters don’t remove chlorine.

What’s wrong with bottled water?  Three things: (a) it’s more laxly regulated by the FDA (not the EPA); (b) a quarter of bottled water is tap water;* and (c) between the fossil fuels needed for the bottles and the transportation and the bottles in the landfill, it’s an environmental outrage! Many of us who want to carry water around buy either a Klean Kanteen or Sigg bottle, lightweight and infinitely re-usable.

* National Resources Defense Council: www.nrdc.org/water/drinking/depth.asp
 

Other solutions?  There are electricity-powered distillers which catch the pure steam from the boiled water; and there are reverse-osmosis filters, which tend to waste a good deal of water.  Cost for different models run between $150-$900.


Information for this newsletter comes from the websites cited above and also from:

Consumer Reports, May, 2007, pp. 38-40

Co-op America’s Real Money, July-august, 2007, pp. 1,6-7.

Nutrition Action, June, 2008, pp. 12-13.



ROSALIND MICHAHELLES --- NUTRITION MATTERS -- 2008

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