I found this - which trots out the usual things about salt being bad for health and high blood pressure etc.
Around 40 years ago I went out to a car boot sale. It was a hot day. When we returned I felt really ill, and it almost felt like I was going to die then and there. I could hardly stand up.
Mrs D phoned up our local surgery, and the doctor on call [I don't think it was our regular GP] said - "Ah - it's been a hot day. Sounds as though it might be salt deficiency." He then mentioned that the weather was unusually hot for the UK, but that in hot countries it wasn't unreasonable to put a teaspoonful of salt in a cup of tea each morning. He suggested putting salt into a glass of water, and drinking it until I could taste it.
I was surprised - I drank quite a lot without tasting any salt at all. Obviously I must have eventually felt better - I think I felt better in under an hour.
After that I would quite frequently "test" myself in hot weather by putting salt into a glass of water, and drinking that. Very often I didn't taste any salt at all.
It also turned out that, unknown to me, Mrs D had read about salt being bad for health, and since we had recently bought a microwave oven, had not been adding any salt to food for a period of a month or so before.
I'm not suggesting that the general advice about salt intake is wrong, but I will mention that some of it may be speculative and based on extrapolating from "idealised" data and patient records.
It is indeed possible, as the article suggests, that many in the UK have at least 50% more salt intake per day than the recommended maximum, but that in itself could indicate that the so-called "maximum" levels are over cautious.
In reality it is llikely that some of those who are way above the recommended maximum will experience future illnesses, strokes or heart attacks, but a significant number may not. Trying to establish recommended "safe" levels based on theoretical ideas just may not be anything like an exact science and we also know that some individuals have metabolism which behaves very differently from the "norm" or "average".
Around 40 years ago I went out to a car boot sale. It was a hot day. When we returned I felt really ill, and it almost felt like I was going to die then and there. I could hardly stand up.
Mrs D phoned up our local surgery, and the doctor on call [I don't think it was our regular GP] said - "Ah - it's been a hot day. Sounds as though it might be salt deficiency." He then mentioned that the weather was unusually hot for the UK, but that in hot countries it wasn't unreasonable to put a teaspoonful of salt in a cup of tea each morning. He suggested putting salt into a glass of water, and drinking it until I could taste it.
I was surprised - I drank quite a lot without tasting any salt at all. Obviously I must have eventually felt better - I think I felt better in under an hour.
After that I would quite frequently "test" myself in hot weather by putting salt into a glass of water, and drinking that. Very often I didn't taste any salt at all.
It also turned out that, unknown to me, Mrs D had read about salt being bad for health, and since we had recently bought a microwave oven, had not been adding any salt to food for a period of a month or so before.
I'm not suggesting that the general advice about salt intake is wrong, but I will mention that some of it may be speculative and based on extrapolating from "idealised" data and patient records.
It is indeed possible, as the article suggests, that many in the UK have at least 50% more salt intake per day than the recommended maximum, but that in itself could indicate that the so-called "maximum" levels are over cautious.
In reality it is llikely that some of those who are way above the recommended maximum will experience future illnesses, strokes or heart attacks, but a significant number may not. Trying to establish recommended "safe" levels based on theoretical ideas just may not be anything like an exact science and we also know that some individuals have metabolism which behaves very differently from the "norm" or "average".
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