A Home Water Filter - Do We Need To Filter Our Drinking
Water?
by Andie Klein
Do we really need a home water filter? Can't we just assume the
water that flows from our kitchen and bathroom tap is
sufficiently treated for contaminants by our municipal water
facility? In order to
answer these
questions, we need to obtain a little more background
information.
Next to air, water is the most important element for our
survival.
Water is an integral part of our life and we use it for many
household tasks throughout the day, such as: drinking and
brushing our teeth, steaming fish and vegetables, washing salad
greens, face and hand washing, showering and bathing, feeding
the pets and watering our plants.
Most of us take it for granted that our tap water is safe to
drink and use for common household tasks. The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), however, estimates that
45,000,000 people drink tap water that is polluted with
chemicals, lead, germs, parasites and other impurities.
A large majority of the major U.S. cities still employ the
same basic water treatment technologies that have been used
since before World War I. In cities such as Atlanta, Boston and
Washington, D.C. consumers are relying on pipes that are, on
average, over a century old. Many people don’t realize that our
municipal water treatment plants are not designed to remove
synthetic chemicals and as a result we find traces of health
threatening contaminants in most of our public water
supplies.
Situations arise when our tap water is polluted with more
than the usual amount of contaminants. Municipal treatment
plants have breakdowns that take time to repair. Lead leaches
into our drinking water from old pipes and private wells.
Smaller water-supply sources can become contaminated from
agricultural and other environmental pollutants.
It is difficult to be sure of the exact amount of toxins in
our water supply. The EPA has estimated that, in our modern
society, we use in excess of 75,000 toxic chemicals and more
than 1000 new chemicals are developed each year. The Ralph
Nader Research Group‚ after reviewing thousands of pages of EPA
documents acquired through the Freedom of Information Act‚
concluded that to date more than 2100 toxic chemicals have
already been detected in U.S. water supplies.
Our planet earth reuses the same water over and over again,
which means there is no "new water". Every single chemical used
in our society, eventually winds up in our water supplies. As
the use of synthetic organic chemicals increases, so does the
toxicity of our water. The earth's natural filtration process
is not effective at removing these toxic synthetic organic
chemicals.
The human body is made up of over 70% water. The proper
function of each organ system, as well as every healing process
that happens inside our body, takes place with water. Optimal
functioning is only possible when water, our body's transport
medium is clean. Wastes form during the body's metabolism and
if these wastes are allowed to accumulate through insufficient
water intake, fatigue and even illness results.
If we drink water that contains chlorine or other organic
and inorganic chemicals, we force our liver and kidneys to act
as a filter for these contaminants. The liver purifies and
detoxifies the blood of waste products and toxins. In addition
to regulating the body's water balance and maintaining optimal
pH, the kidney also removes metabolic waste products from the
bloodstream.
By providing the liver and kidneys with water, a universal
solvent and transport medium, they are assisted in their role
as a natural body filter. Bombarding these organs with water
that contains traces of additional toxins only hinders the body
detoxification process and delays waste removal.
Water may not cure every ailment, but it is a primary
ingredient that allows our body to dilute and eliminate toxins
that have accumulated over time.
What Can We Do To Provide Healthy Water For Our Family?
The simplest, most effective and also the most economical
way to treat municipal tap water is a home water filter.
Multi-media water filters that combine activated carbon with
iron exchange media such as KDF are an excellent choice.
Carbon and KDF work together to remove or reduce traces of
contaminants such as chlorine, lead, Cryptosporidium and
Giardia cysts, synthetic chemicals, volatile organic compounds
(VOCs), MTBE, pesticides (lindane, atrazine), chemicals linked
to cancer (benzene, TTHMs, toxaphene) and hundreds of other
chemical contaminants that may be present causing bad taste and
odors in your drinking water.
The result is healthy, great-tasting water that still
contains natural trace minerals that are beneficial to optimal
wellbeing and health.
© Copyright 2005 Andie Klein
About The Author
Andie Klein is a Registered Nurse and webmaster of
http://www.home-water-filter-guide.com.
Article may be reprinted in full and be unedited. All links
must remain active and point to author's website.
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