A Urologist Explains How Much Water You Should Actually Drink

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We’ve all heard at some point that we should be drinking eight glasses of water per day to meet our hydration goals and stay healthy—but is that really true? In a recent video on her YouTube channel, urologist Dr. Rena Malik addresses some myths around water and hydration, starting with the misconception that if you drink less, you will need to pee less often.

“Drinking too little water makes your urine very concentrated,” she says. “That concentrated urine can actually act like a bladder irritant… That means you may have the sensation that you need to go more frequently or more urgently.”

That said, are the commonly cited eight glasses of water per day considered an ideal volume? Not necessarily. “You need to be having some form of fluids in that volume a day,” says Malik. “20 percent of our fluids come from our food.”

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According to the Institute of Medicine, men are recommended to take in 125 ounces (3.7 liters) of total fluid from beverages and food each day, while women are advised to consume 91 ounces (2.7 liters).

“Our bodies do an amazing job of regulating our fluids, and it tells us when we need to drink by giving us signals that we are thirsty,” she continues. “Generally speaking, your body doesn’t decide that it’s thirsty until you’ve lost about 2 percent of your body water. That’s not a lot, and it’s very easy to make up by drinking fluids.”

Malik added that in some cases, you will need to drink more fluids, such as if you get frequent urinary tract infections. In instances like these, you should follow the guidance of your doctor.

While being well-hydrated is an important part of our overall health and nutrition, and has even been linked to peak performance, Malik warns that being over-hydrated comes with its own issues. “Sometimes if you drink too much, it can lower the salt in your body too much and cause something called hyponatremia, which can make you very sick,” he says.

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Project hosts clash over ‘boring’ employees’ right to skip out on work drinks: ‘We should be paid!’

Project hosts clash over the right of ‘boring’ employees to skip out on work drinks after a worker was sacked for not taking part in ‘fun’ office activities: ‘We should be paid!’

  • A French man was sacked for refusing to attend ‘fun’ work functions like drinks
  • He then took his employer to court and ‘won the right to be boring’
  • The Project panel was divided over the issue of compulsory work cocktails

The hosts of The Project have butted heads over the etiquette of attending after-work social functions and whether employees are still on the clock.

The debate on Sunday night’s program was sparked after a segment discussing a French citizen who took his employer to court after he was sacked for not taking part in ‘fun’ office activities.

A Paris court ruled the man, known only as ‘Mr T’, was within his rights to refuse invites to after-hours events including weekend drinks and he was rewarded $5,000 in compensation, though he also intended to sue.

The man’s mini-uprising caused The Project’s Hamish MacDonald to label him ‘an absolute bore’ but other panelists weren’t so quick to agree.

Hamish MacDonald (left) was all for the work drink tradition but Rachel Corbett (right) said they should be avoided at all costs

Hamish MacDonald (left) was all for the work drink tradition but Rachel Corbett (right) said they should be avoided at all costs

poll

Should careers hinge on work social functions?

  • Yes, it’s all part of the job don’t be boring 5 votes
  • No way, keep work and social life separate 203 votes

“It’s a win for those of us who don’t want to do these kinds of things…the drinks and the parties they’re just not my jam,” co-host Rachel Corbett said.

‘Yes they are… I’ve been to one of these things with you and you made us drive there in convoy,’ MacDonald said.

‘Only because then I make everyone get to the door at exactly the same time so I don’t have to go into the thing alone,’ Corbett fired back.

Celebrity Letters and Numbers hosted and occasional Project panelist Michael Hing then argued it was his ‘firm belief that work drinks count as work’.

‘We should be paid… It’s a labor-relations issue for me,’ Hing said.

‘If bosses think there is some team bonding experience that can happen at work drinks they should pay you and it should happen during lunch.’

The debate was sparked after a French national 'won the right to be boring' after he took his employer to court to fire him when he wouldn't attend work drinks (stock image)

The debate was sparked after a French national ‘won the right to be boring’ after he took his employer to court to fire him when he wouldn’t attend work drinks (stock image)

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Do You Need to Drink Eight Glasses of Water a Day? It’s Complicated : ScienceAlert

It’s unclear exactly where the myth that humans need to drink eight glasses of water a day came from – but we’ve probably all heard it at some point in our lives.

The evidence for this claim has been debunked in large part. Past studies relied on people recalling how much water they drank, which had low precision.

To provide a more accurate estimate of how much water we actually need, a new study recruited over 5,600 people of all ages from 26 countries around the world.

Researchers gave participants 100 milliliters of water enriched with 5 percent ‘doubly labeled water’.

Doubly labeled water is often used for metabolism experiments as it provides a way to track how rapidly chemicals are moving through the body.

This type of water contains unusual isotopes of hydrogen called deuterium. They have an extra neutron in their nucleus, making individual atoms twice as heavy as a normal hydrogen atom which has just one proton and no neutrons.

The resulting heavy water, which is 10 percent heavier than normal water, is safe to drink in small amounts.

To make it doubly labeled, this heavy water is also mixed with water containing an isotope of oxygen, Oxygen-18, which has 8 protons and 10 neutrons in each atom (instead of the normal 8 of each). This is a stable, naturally occurring type of oxygen that makes up 0.2 percent of the air we breathe.

“If you measure the rate a person is eliminating those stable isotopes through their urine over the course of a week, the hydrogen isotope can tell you how much water they’re replacing, and the elimination of the oxygen isotope can tell us how many calories they are burning,” says Dale Schoeller, a nutritional scientist who co-authored the study.

The University of Wisconsin–Madison lab, where Schoeller works, first pioneered the doubly labeled water experiment in humans in the 1980s.

In their recent study, published in Sciencethe team shows that daily water intake varies greatly with age, gender, activity levels, and climate.

“The current study clearly indicates that one size does not fit all guidelines for drinking water, and the common suggestion that we should drink eight 8-ounce glasses of water per day (~2 liters) is not backed up by objective evidence,” the researchers write.

Water turnover is greatest in men aged 20-30 and in women aged 20-55 and decreases after the age of 40 in men and after the age of 65 in women.

Newborns have the highest turnover of water as a percentage of all the water in their bodies – replacing around 28 percent every day.

Under similar conditions, men consume about half a liter more water every day than women.

For example, a 20-year-old man who is not athletic, weighs 70 kg, and lives in a developed country at sea level with 50 percent humidity and a mean air temperature of 10°C will have a water turnover of around 3.2 liters per day.

A nonathletic woman of the same age living in the same location will have a water turnover of around 2.7 liters per day.

Using twice as much energy in a day increases the daily water turnover by about a liter.

For every additional 50 kilograms of body weight, water turnover increases by 0.7 liters a day.

A 50 percent jump in humidity pushes water use up by 0.3 liters.

Some people in the study had extremely high water turnover: 13 women who got through over 7 liters per day, they were either athletes, pregnant women, or experiencing warm weather, and nine men who consumed over 10 liters a day.

Once again these were very active people, athletes, or Amazonian Ecuador foragers.

“The variation means pointing to one average doesn’t tell you much,” says Schoeller.

Water turnover increased for pregnant women in the third trimester of pregnancy and during breastfeeding.

People living a sedentary lifestyle in temperature-controlled indoor environments in developed countries had lower water turnover than people working as manual laborers or hunter-gatherers in developing countries.

“Improved guidelines are of increasing importance because of the explosive population growth and climate change the world currently faces, which will affect the availability of water for human consumption,” the researchers wrote.

This paper was published in Science.

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