Showing posts with label water. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 May 2016

Princess Health and Tips for staying healthy and safe on Kentucky's waters. Princessiccia

Brad Molnar on Taylorsville Lake
(Courier-Journal file photo, 2003)
The state Division of Water and Department for Public Health offer tips to help Kentuckians stay safe and healthy as they go boating, fishing, swimming or otherwise recreate in the state's waterways this summer:
  • Avoid ingesting or inhaling the water.
  • Thoroughly clean hands and other areas that have come in contact with the water.
  • Avoid allowing open wounds to have direct contact with the water.
  • Avoid areas where swimming or harmful algal bloom advisories have been issued.
  • Avoid water with obvious odors or surface scums.
  • Avoid getting in water after heavy rainfall, especially in dense residential, urban and agricultural areas.
  • Avoid areas below wastewater-treatment outfalls, animal feedlots, straight pipes or other obvious sources of pollution.
  • Restrict pets and livestock from drinking the water if a bright green or blue-green surface scum is present.
James Bruggers, environmental reporter for The Courier-Journal, reminds us: "The Clean Water Act of 1972 declared that all waterways in the United States were to be 'fishable and swimmable' by 1985. We've made progress, but we have a long way to go. Be safe out there."

Wednesday, 9 April 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andPoll gauges Kentuckians' consumption, sources and opinions of drinking water; E. Ky. likes bottled water more than other areas.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Princess Health andPoll gauges Kentuckians' consumption, sources and opinions of drinking water; E. Ky. likes bottled water more than other areas.Princessiccia

Drinking water is necessary for the human body to work properly. Because one can consume water through drinking other beverages or eating foods like lettuce, tomatoes, oranges and melons, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does not recommend drinking a particular number of cups per day. However, it does recommend drinking water instead of other high-calorie beverages, especially if a person is trying to remain at a healthy weight, according to the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky's latest release of information from its 2013 Kentucky Health Issues Poll.

The poll, in October and November, gauged Kentuckians' consumption, sources and opinions of their drinking water. While 24 percent reported drinking eight or more cups of water each day, 8 percent said they don't drink water daily. Thirty-two percent said they drink one to three cups per day, and the remaining 35 percent say they drink between four and seven cups.

About half of those surveyed (52 percent) reported drinking tap water most often, and 39 percent said they drink mostly bottled water. Only 4 percent said they primarily drink well water, showing how extensive water lines have become in rural areas. Louisville-area citizens are more inclined (61 percent) to report drinking tap water than people from other areas, and Eastern Kentucky residents were most likely to report drinking bottled water (50 percent) or well water (10 percent).

Why don't some Kentuckians drink tap water? More than four in ten (43 percent) cite the taste of the water as an explanation. Some also say it seems unsafe (13 percent), that they have access to bottled water (13 percent) or that they believe chemicals are in the water (11 percent).

The poll, co-sponsored by Interact for Health of Cincinnati, has an error margin of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.