In the summer, it is quite easy to know when your body is starting to feel dehydrated but, according to Hannah Belsham, Health and Wellbeing Physiologist at Nuffield Health , our thirst response diminishes by up to 40% during these colder months.
Basically, we don’t feel as thirsty even when our body needs fluids. She adds: “The dry, heated indoor air also increases water loss through breathing and the skin.
“Add in caffeine, alcohol, and comforting salty foods that are common this time of year and dehydration can quietly creep in (even when you’re not sweating).”
Not ideal.
Huffpost UK spoke with Belsham and her colleague, Kim Goldin, Senior GP and Health Assessment Doctor at Nuffield Health at Nuffield Health to learn more about how to stay hydrated in winter.
The cold weather e

HuffPost UK

Dakota News Now Sports
OK Magazine
Breitbart News
Essentiallysports Basketball
Raw Story
Tribune Chronicle Community
Vogue Fashion
AlterNet
The Daily Beast
The Babylon Bee