What’s in your water?

http://au.lifestyle.yahoo.com/womens-health/life-features/special-reports/article/-/15812517/what-s-...



ChlorineHow’d it get in there? Chlorine’s a lifesaver – most treatment plants dose tap water with it...



Its effects In small doses, chlorine is considered safe to ingest according to Australia’s National Health and Medical Research Centre(NHMRC), over several months, military personnel drank wa...



But you may have heard recent news about SA tap water breaching the NHMRC’s Australian Drinking Wate...


One US study, led by Harvard University, linked chlorinated drinking water to bladder and rectal can...



SA Health principal water quality adviser Dr David Cunliffe is calling for calm, assuring that SA wa...


 


Take action Chlorine by-products evaporate naturally, so if you’re worried, let your glass sit prett...



PathogensHow’d they get in there?In plain English, pathogens are any disease-producing organism, lik...



“Pathogens can enter the water system either at the source (before treatment) or after treatment (in the pipes delivering it to you) through direct faecal or human contact with the water, sewage leakages, stormwater run-off after rain and animal droppings,” says Dr Helen Stratton, senior lecturer at the Smart Water Research Centre at Queensland’s Griffith University.


Its effects You may recall the most publicised drinking water contamination incident in Australia in 1998, when high numbers of organisms, giardia and cryptosporidium, were reported in Sydney’s treated water – three million residents were advised to boil their water to avoid diarrhoea.



Take action If you have a weaker immune system you may want to boil water for at least five minutes ... five, chemotherapy patients and the elderly are more at risk, even at very low doses, and should always make sure the water they drink or swim in is safe,” says Dr Stratton.



LeadHow’d it get in there?Treatment plants strip out nearly all traces of lead, but just as Black Sa...



If you live in a home built before the 1930s, chances are your pipes contain lead, plus lead-based solders were used on copper pipes until as recently as 1989. But don’t go re-piping your house – the NHMRC says we get more lead from food, dirt and dust than water.



Its effects For some, a small amount of lead is bad news; it’s a cumulative poison that can attack your nervous system, and it’s been linked to things like irritability, anaemia, kidney damage and cancer.


A study in Environment International linked childhood lead exposure to violence in adulthood. If you’re trying to conceive you should also be careful – research over the years has linked lead poisoning to miscarriage and foetal complications.



Take action Run your taps for two minutes each morning to flush out water that’s been stagnating in ...Plain About Drinking Water. Use the wastage to water your plants.


PharmaceuticalsHow’d they get in there?Every time you pop a pill – contraceptive, antibiotic or pain...



“[Water treatment plants have] several options to greatly reduce the levels of drugs in water,” says Dr Frederic Leusch, program leader of Water Quality and Diagnostics at Griffith University.



“These techniques are 99.99 per cent effective, which means that they will remove the great majority of drugs and other chemical pollutants [like pesticides] from water sources, but a tiny little bit will always be left in.”


Its effects The NHMRC says that no definitive link has been established between drug exposure in drinking water and health problems, probably because traces are so low: “For example, [paracetamol] has been detected at up to 45 nanograms per litre in drinking water,” says Dr Leusch.



“At that concentration, you’d have to drink two litres of tap water every day for 30,000 years to ge...


Some reports, including one by the University Medical Center Freiburg in Germany, have raised alarm bells over antibiotics in water supplies potentially leading to the development of superbugs, yet the NHMRC says studies are yet to confirm this.


Your action plan Many household filters don’t stop drug residuals, so watch this space: worldwide investigations into drugs in drinking water are ongoing.



If you’re concerned, drink bottled spring water, but make sure you look for the words “spring” or “m...

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Re: What’s in your water?

Even the dog has been looking for alternate drinking water:( trying to get into the shower recess and lifting the toilet lid:O...so I'm now boiling water for the pets. The smell of chlorine on our water of later has been awful....standing in the shower you can smell it, same when brushing teeth.


We drink bottled water

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Re: What’s in your water?

Once there was so much chlorine in our water it bleached a face washer in the bath!



I filter my water, I find it removes the 'chemical' taste.

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Re: What’s in your water?

I drink rainwater. When I make a cup of tea with  town water it's dull and cloudy... but with rainwater it's clear. 

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Re: What’s in your water?

there's all sorts of things in water .... fish live in it, make love in it, empty their body waste into it, die in it. .... would you drink out of your fishbowl even after you filtered out the 'lumps'?



animals die in dams

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Re: What’s in your water?

animals die in dams.....don't tell them that

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Re: What’s in your water?

I suspect birds poop on my roof and it runs into my tank I've seen some up there you know

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Re: What’s in your water?

I use a water filter jug also.



Wonder if this statement is true?



Chlorine is a fat-soluble compound and just as much enters your body when you take a shower as when you drink it directly.


 


Waterindustry, California


 

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