President Joe Biden's administration has announced a plan to rip out nine million lead water pipes across the US. The 10-year proposal aims to shield communities from a neurotoxin that can cause permanent damage to the brain and nervous system, especially in children. It would cost about $30bn (£24bn), the Environmental Protection Agency says.
Hyponatremia or low sodium syndrome: Did you know drinking too much water can kill as electrolytes level dips?
You may have heard of the water-drinking contest held by a radio station in the US in 2007 that caused the death of a woman named Jennifer Strange. The radio station was fined $16.5 million in the compensation payable to the dead woman’s husband following the wrongful death lawsuit. Strange suffered hyponatremia, or acute water intoxication. Immediate medical care might have saved with an IV sodium drip to counteract the water, the doctor testified. She had been drinking water for nearly three hours without urinating during the January 12, 2007 contest. She died of water poisoning.
Children in schools and daycares across Canada are exposed to unsafe water
Many children in schools and daycares across Canada are likely being exposed to dangerous levels of lead in their drinking water and don’t know it, because most provinces aren’t requiring comprehensive testing at the taps, according to a collection of provincial studies and internal briefing material. The internal briefing material included memos and other advice prepared for high-ranking government officials in several provinces. These documents were released through freedom of information legislation to Global News as part of a joint year-long investigation into drinking water in partnership with Concordia University’s Institute for Investigative Journalism and other media organizations.