Water, hydration, and health

Water, hydration, and health

Publication Year:
2010
Authors:
Popkin, Barry M.; D'Anci, Kristen E.; Rosenberg, Irwin H.
Language:
English
Resource Type:
Journal Article
Summary:
This review examines the current knowledge of water intake as it pertains to human health.
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Resource Information

Abstract

This review examines the current knowledge of water intake as it pertains to human health, including overall patterns of intake and some factors linked with intake, the complex mechanisms behind water homeostasis, and the effects of variation in water intake on health and energy intake, weight, and human performance and functioning. Water represents a critical nutrient, the absence of which will be lethal within days. Water’s importance for the prevention of nutrition-related noncommunicable diseases has received more attention recently because of the shift toward consumption of large proportions of fluids as caloric beverages. Despite this focus, there are major gaps in knowledge related to the measurement of total fluid intake and hydration status at the population level; there are also few longer-term systematic interventions and no published randomized, controlled longer-term trials. This review provides suggestions for ways to examine water requirements and encourages more dialogue on this important topic.

Resource Type

Journal Article

Publication Year

2010

Author

Popkin, Barry M.; D'Anci, Kristen E.; Rosenberg, Irwin H.

Language

English

University Affiliation

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Tufts University

Business Connect Takeaways

Water is the most important nutrient for human survival, and understanding water measurement and requirements is crucial for maintaining good health.
There are few negative effects of water intake, while the evidence for positive effects is quite clear
The quality of evidence used to evaluate the effects of water intake on human health varies, with strong evidence coming from meta-analyses of randomized, controlled trials, and weaker evidence coming from descriptive studies or expert committee reports.

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