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Is it better to drink sea water or urine?

Urine is 95% water and 5% sodium, chloride, potassium and urea. Although that sounds promising, consider that sea water is 96.5% water and 3.5% sodium and chloride. Drinking urine will have the same effect that sea water does: It'll dehydrate you further.

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Myths, lies and old wives’ tales loom large in the outdoor pursuits. Here at MeatEater, we’re dedicated to separating facts from bullsh*t, so we created this series to examine suspect yarns. If there’s a belief, rumor or long-held assumption you’d like us to fact check, drop us a note at factchecker@themeateater.com.

Claim

When stranded without access to fresh water, you should drink your own urine.

Origin

Popular survival stories often focus on the shocking and extreme measures people take to stave off death, even for a little while. Drinking urine to fend off dehydration happens to be a favorite. Aron Ralston, the climber who amputated his own arm to escape a canyoneering accident, drank his own urine after running out of food and water. Other headlines tell of less-famous survivors who drank urine when trapped under rubble, in cars and on boats. The first person to tap their own faucet when facing lethal dehydration likely predates written record by a few millennia. The mythology of surviving on recycled liquids, however, remains a popular topic in contemporary storytelling, and urine therapy has been popular in Eastern medicine for centuries.

Facts

Urine is 95% water and 5% sodium, chloride, potassium and urea. Although that sounds promising, consider that sea water is 96.5% water and 3.5% sodium and chloride. Drinking urine will have the same effect that sea water does: It’ll dehydrate you further. By consuming urine, you’re taking all the stuff that your kidneys just filtered and putting it right back in your stomach. After repeating this process a few times, your urine will be so highly concentrated with dangerous toxins that it could cause renal meltdown or kidney failure. That means death. For those of you skeptical of science and biology, maybe you’ll heed advice from the Army’s official survival guide. In their chapter on water, urine is listed as something you should not drink in a survival situation, along with sea water, blood, alcohol or “fish juices.” As for the folk tales about urine’s curative powers, no medical literature promotes drinking urine. It won’t cure cancer, jellyfish stings, acne, sunburns, allergies, calluses, gum disease or any other ailment you might suffer from.

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How often do Lifestraws need to be replaced?

The LifeStraw Activated Carbon and Ion Exchange filter lasts approximately 40 gallons (150 liters). We estimate that it should be replaced every 2 months. This assumes that a household uses approximately 2.5 liters per day or refills the 7-cup filter housing approximately 5 times per day.

The LifeStraw Activated Carbon and Ion Exchange filter lasts approximately 40 gallons (150 liters). We estimate that it should be replaced every 2 months. This assumes that a household uses approximately 2.5 liters per day or refills the 7-cup filter housing approximately 5 times per day. If you are using the product less, you can adjust your estimate of length of time needed before you must replace the activated carbon and ion exchange filter. Another way to tell if the filter has reached its lifetime capacity is if you can detect that the taste of your water has returned to the original tap taste. This may be more apparent for some people than others. Heavy metals and chemicals rely on prolonged exposure to cause sickness so if your activated carbon and ion exchange filter has a short lapse in timespan, you should not be at immediate risk. The membrane microfilter lasts 264 gallons (4,000 liters). We estimate that it should be replaced once per year. This filter ends its lifetime when flow rate becomes drastically reduced or completely blocked out of the filter. It will never allow bacteria, parasites or microplastics to filter through it. This is critical as these contaminants can cause immediate sickness unlike most chemicals and heavy metals found in water.

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