Water Filtration Systems
http://www.todayshealthyhome.com/water_filters/shower_filters.htm
Chlorine & Contaminants in Your Shower and Bath Water
The American Chemical Society estimates that “we could receive from 6 to 100 times more chlorine by breathing the air around showers and baths than we could by drinking water.”
Chlorine is used almost universally in the treatment of public water supplies because of its toxic effect on harmful bacteria and other waterborne, disease-causing organisms. But there is growing evidence that chlorine in water may actually pose serious health risks when it is absorbed into the human body over long periods of time. Chlorine readily passes through cell walls and attaches to fatty acids in the cell, disrupting life-sustaining functions. The human body is composed of billions of similar cells, which also absorb chlorine.
Chlorine chemically bonds with the protein in skin and hair, making hair brittle and dry, and making skin itchy, dry, and flaky. One half of our daily chlorine exposure is from showering. Not only is chlorine absorbed through the skin, but it also vaporizes in the shower, is inhaled into the lungs, and is then transferred directly into the blood system. In fact, chlorine exposure from one shower is equal to an entire day’s amount of drinking the same water. Therefore, drinking filtered water addresses only half the problem.
- http://waterfilters.mercola.com/shower-filter.aspx (great site about the contaminants in water however it is promoting a product)
- Testimonials by doctors
- http://www.discountjuicers.com/chlorineshower.html
- http://countertopwaterfilters.net/chlorine-in-drinking-water-how-you-can-get-rid-o
- Tap Water specific
- http://www.ewg.org/tap-water/home
- Types of water filtration systems
- http://www.ewg.org/tap-water/home
- Interactive tour of water treatment plant (may not be relevant)
- Types of water softeners
- How it works
- What is hard water?
- Effects of hard water
- Alternatives “Easywater” (Not sure if we still sell these)
Water Softeners
- Types of water softeners
- How it works
- What is hard water?
- Effects of hard water
- Alternatives “Easywater” (Not sure if we still sell these)