GreekChat.com Forums

GreekChat.com Forums (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/index.php)
-   News & Politics (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/forumdisplay.php?f=207)
-   -   Drs. debunk 7 medical myths (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=92818)

nittanyalum 01-10-2008 12:25 PM

Drs. debunk 7 medical myths
 
From U.S. News & World Report online (it's in slideshow format, click "next" through the images), nothing TOO earth-shattering, but some are really interesting: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/photogr...re.php?image=1

DSTCHAOS 01-10-2008 01:09 PM

I don't trust it when myths are "debunked." They need more people.

I will continue to tell people to drink lots of water and not to read in dim light.

nittanyalum 01-10-2008 01:30 PM

^^^LOL! :)

DSTCHAOS 01-10-2008 01:35 PM

Those are the only "myths" that stuck out for me. :) My eyes hurt when I read in dim light and I feel dehydrated when I don't drink a lot of water everyday. Until they can prove that pain and super thirst don't have consequences, boooo to them.

nittanyalum 01-10-2008 01:38 PM

I'll keep drinking water and flipping on a light to read, too ;), but I'll admit that I have always heard (and believed) the thing about your hair and nails still growing after you're dead and about the shaved hair coming back thicker and coarser... I remember the junior high conversations about whether to start shaving above the knee, because "once you start you can't stop, all the hair will come back thick and dark - ugh!!" :)

DSTCHAOS 01-10-2008 01:47 PM

LOL. I don't think I thought enough of the hair and nails after death thing to believe it. I did believe the hair growing back coarser and thicker thing. Until I noticed that my hair didn't really grow back coarser and thicker. :D

Kevlar281 01-10-2008 02:36 PM

How the heck is drinking 8 glasses of water a day setting the bar to high for some people?

Tom Earp 01-10-2008 03:56 PM

And the old family cures used to work and Drs. made HOUSE CALLS!

Now if it is not FDA approved, it does not work!

Health Food Stores cannot state that certain herbs, spices, and vitamins can cure anything as the FDA says so!

What happened to the old days when those things worked for us?

SWTXBelle 01-10-2008 05:14 PM

Water, water everywhere
 
I don't think drinking water is the problem - it's the rather random "8" glasses, which hasn't been proven to be better than 7 or 9. It's the amount rather than the water itself which is medically unproven.

DSTCHAOS 01-10-2008 05:54 PM

Too little water is a problem and too much water is a problem.

That may be why they picked 8.

There are a lot of people who don't drink any water and have to rely on their foods for water. And their foods are so processed and fattening, anyway. They only drink sugary drinks or coffee. It's really gross thinking about some people's food and beverage diets.

Drolefille 01-11-2008 02:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DSTCHAOS (Post 1578248)
Too little water is a problem and too much water is a problem.

That may be why they picked 8.

There are a lot of people who don't drink any water and have to rely on their foods for water. And their foods are so processed and fattening, anyway. They only drink sugary drinks or coffee. It's really gross thinking about some people's food and beverage diets.

Except that doctors are saying that even your soda or your food counts as water intake. 8 has no basis in fact, so saying that someone picked it as a balance between too much and too little is trying to create justification for something that doesn't exist. With the water that people get from other sources 2.2 liters may be too much.

JonoBN41 01-12-2008 06:56 PM

It's only in the past few years that bottled water became available, and now everyone has to have water with them all the time. It didn't used to be that way, and we got along perfectly fine.

I went to college in Florida, where the tap water was warm, over-chlorinated (so it wasn't brown), and stunk from the hydrogen sulphide.

We drank lots of beer and scotch for sure, and I recall making up jugs of cherry Kool-Aid, but I'm guessing I didn't drink even one glass of plain water the whole 4+ years I was in school. I'll bet no one else there did either.

DSTCHAOS 01-12-2008 07:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JonoBN41 (Post 1579450)
It's only in the past few years that bottled water became available, and now everyone has to have water with them all the time. It didn't used to be that way, and we got along perfectly fine.

Before bottled water, many people put faucet or filtered water in cups and lug mugs so they could have water throughout the day. Or they drank water with meals or in one sitting to get rid of thirst and the possiblity of dehydration.

I've been hearing about the importance of drinking water since I was little. And it wasn't a new idea. Now it's just more available and convenient.

DSTCHAOS 01-12-2008 07:17 PM

Here's a cool article on water that doesn't mention the random 8 glasses a day rule.

http://nutrition.about.com/od/hydrat...terarticle.htm

macallan25 01-12-2008 07:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tom Earp (Post 1578120)
What happened to the old days when letters were delivered on horseback?

.


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:50 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.