These tips can help you stay hydrated and healthy while adventuring—and ditch single-use plastic while you do it.
Your options for Dry January go well beyond beer, with breweries producing other alcohol-free beverages, and creative NA ...
Over half of Americans have either prediabetes or another type of diabetes, per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which means that roughly 50% of people are looking for ways to ...
Drinking water can help lower blood sugar if a person is dehydrated. This is because being dehydrated causes the blood to become more concentrated, which in turn raises blood glucose levels. Drinking ...
Drinking enough water is crucial to maintaining overall health and proper hydration, which supports just about every bodily function. Water to the body is like oil to a machine — it keeps everything ...
You know the moment, when you’re at a party, and the playlist humming in the background suddenly plays that song. Everyone perks up. Phones pause mid-scroll, and the conversation stalls. Some songs ...
A new study by researchers at Columbia University has revealed the states that have higher rates of arsenic in public drinking water systems, most of which are in the West and Midwest. Michigan, South ...
Drinking Water to Lose Weight: What’s the Idea? You've probably heard many of the ways water is good for you – it helps move waste out of your body, helps your cells work the way they should, ...
I’m going to finally come out of the closet. I am chronically water-avoidant. When they try to pour tap water for me at a restaurant, I might quip, “Never touch the stuff.” As a teacher, it can be ...
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Monday said he plans to tell the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to stop recommending fluoridation in communities ...
Miami-Dade County voted to stop adding fluoride from the public water supply. More cities and counties across the U.S. are moving to ban fluoride in public drinking water after Utah became the first ...
More than 37 million Americans drink water from systems that exceed limits on toxic "forever chemicals," according to USA TODAY's analysis of the first update of Environmental Protection Agency data ...