From the category archives:

Water Quality

Understanding Common Toxicities Found in Everyday Drinking Water

Municipal drinking water systems were designed and constructed decades ago when the primary objective of the treatment processes was to remove harmful bacteria. Much has changed in the composition of our source water over those decades. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) openly says, “the way we guarantee safe drinking water is broken and needs to be fixed.” Additional statistics support the toxic dangers we face when ingesting unfiltered water. Over 20% of US water treatment systems have violated provisions of the Safe Drinking Water. Only 91 contaminants are regulated by the Safe Drinking Water Act, and yet there are more than more than 60,000.

Water Checking

The best way to get your water tested is to contact your local health department, which is required by law to test your water for under $100. And, according to the EPA Municipalities “right to know” law, all municipalities are required to send and post an online report on the quality of water it is treating every year. They usually include the contaminants that exceed legal limits AND contaminants that exceed healthy requirements.


The Aquasana Difference

According to the most recent World Health Organization report, there are several health benefits to drinking water that has been selectively filtered. Unlike other products on the market, Aquasana uses a selective filtration process, versus a mechanical one, which means this technology eliminates dangerous chemicals like lead and chlorine, but keeps the good stuff like potassium and calcium. Their exclusive dual filter system uses a combination of carbon filtration, ion-exchange and sub-micron filtration to produce truly healthy, great tasting water.  The cleanest water to shower in, too.

Selective Filtration

The “A” cartridge filters out chlorine and turbidity (milky haze and/or floating particulate), the two most concentrated contaminants in tap water. This allows cartridge “B” to focus on the more difficult contaminants such as lead, VOCs, THMs and synthetic chemicals.  (THM’s are also called DBP’s meaning  disinfection by products.)  The “B” Cartridge is where the final stages of filtration take place. Lead is reduced by a complex ion-exchange process that replaces harmful lead ions with healthy potassium ions. Following this is the most important stage, which involves the absorption of synthetic chemicals like herbicides, pesticides and industrial solvents. Moreover, the “B” cartridge is a 0.5 micron absolute filter that is effective in the removal of chlorine resistant organisms and cysts like Cryptosporidium and Giardia.

Click here for a 20% discount on all Aquasana products.

{ Comments on this entry are closed }

A timely report by non-profit advocacy group, Environmental Working Group, advises that the nation’s tap water has been compromised by weak federal standards and pitiful protection of our drinking water supplies. Additionally, the EWG has provided a website so you may check the amount of contaminants in your drinking water. Enter your zip code at http://www.ewg.org/tap-water/whats-in-yourwater.

Remember, this is the water you use for bathing too.

Water containing legally acceptable contaminants is not as healthy as it can be.  Simply using the best water and shower filters, made in the US under strict guidelines, will give you the “healthiest water on earth”.

{ Comments on this entry are closed }

Chloroform in your Water

Chloroform is a by-product of chlorine and it easily enters your body through the skin. Therefore, chloroform may also enter your body if you take a bath or shower in water containing chloroform. In addition, you can breathe in chloroform if the shower water is hot enough for chloroform to evaporate. Studies in people and [...]

Read the full article →

Synthetic Organic Compounds in Drinking Water

Synthetic organic compounds (SOC’s) can be found in drinking water. SOC’s are another class of man-made contaminants that are present in ground water. Collectively, this group includes prescription drugs, herbicides, pesticides, and other chemicals that come from agriculture, urban storm water runoff, or industrial activities.

Read the full article →

Volatile Organic Chemicals in Drinking Water

Volatile organic chemicals (VOCs) is the umbrella term for a large number of synthetic chemicals found in drinking and bathing water. These chemicals were first discovered in drinking water in 1977.  VOCs make their way into water through a variety of sources, including septic system cleaning, weed and pest control, fumigation, and dry cleaning. When [...]

Read the full article →

Trihalomethanes in Drinking Water

THMs, or trihalomethanes, are chemical compounds that are formed as a result of a reaction between organic materials in drinking water and chlorine added as a disinfectant. THMs are one of the many byproducts of water chlorination. When ingested in drinking water or absorbed from shower water, THMs can cause a host of physical problems. THMs [...]

Read the full article →

Access Keys | Accessibility Statement | Change Text Size
Copyright Notice | Privacy Statement | Terms and Conditions
Recommendations