It’s a challenge for parents to keep their children dehydrated. Children are not like adults who know when it’s time drink when needed. Parents and caretakers should check on them from time to time.
In the event of Tang’s #UhawAreYou, there is an alarming study by the Nutrition Research Institute of the Department of Science and Technology (FNRI-DOST) that 83% of Filipino kids who are not drinking and can make themselves dehydrated. Not just it’s unhealthy, Dehydration can make children weak which results in low performance in school activities. These might lead children to chronic dehydration with risks of Urinary Tract Infection (UTI), hypertension, development of kidney stones, and stroke.
FLUID INTAKE
Princess Landicho, Tang Philippines Brand Manager said, “The first step is raising awareness that we are not drinking enough, that we have a hydration gap problem especially among Filipino kids. Imagine 8 out of 10 kids are not drinking the required number of glasses! Also, we have to let parents know the serious effects of dehydration to children. This will encourage them to keep their kids (and themselves) hydrated through different ways.”
Drinking 8 glasses of water is a myth. It will depend on the age and how active the person is. For kids ages, 6-9, drink at least 5-6 glasses of water a day while kids ages 10-12 should drink 7 glasses of water a day.
FIGHT DEHYDRATION
“The food and different beverages that we take every day are also important sources of water in addition to plain drinking water to help the body rehydrate. Milk and dairy-based beverages, fruit juice, fruit-flavored drinks, especially when fortified with vitamins and minerals. Soups, fruits like watermelon, melon, and strawberries, and vegetables like lettuce, cabbage, and spinach contain 90-99 percent water. Fruits like apple, grapes, oranges, and pineapple contain 80-89 percent water. All of these could be used to rehydrate. In fact, on the average about 20 percent of our total water intake comes from food, and 80 percent comes from drinking water and beverages.” Healthy expert Dr. Rodolfo F. Florentino said.
Dr. Rodolfo F. Florentino also said, “The food and different beverages that we take every day are also important sources of water in addition to plain drinking water to help the body rehydrate. Milk and dairy-based beverages, fruit juice, fruit-flavored drinks, especially when fortified with vitamins and minerals. Soups, fruits like watermelon, melon, and strawberries, and vegetables like lettuce, cabbage, and spinach contain 90-99 percent water. Fruits like apple, grapes, oranges, and pineapple contain 80-89 percent water. All of these could be used to rehydrate. In fact, on the average about 20 percent of our total water intake comes from food, and 80 percent comes from drinking water and beverages.”
THE RIGHT DRINKS TO CHOOSE
“I literally have to chase my daughter to drink! I have to find the perfect glass that she would drink most with, which was this colorful straw tumbler. Apart from water, I also make her drink milk and juice like our favorite Tang, all to keep her hydrated! As a mom, you just have to find out what works for your kids and stay patient!,” A Doting mom-of two said remembering what she had to do just make her daughter dehydrated.
She added, “I found that my daughter personally drinks the most with a straw bottle. When she drinks straight from a glass, usually nagsip siya, pag nabasa lang yung lips, parang drink na iyon. But then, in the same scenario when I made her drink through a straw, she can really finish a glass or a bottle.”
Bianca Gonzalez also added a quick beat-the-heat tip on her interview: “I usually make
Kasi my daughter drink room temperature water but when it’s summer, I like to put just one piece of ice just to make it a bit cool and more enticing to drink.”
Image source
1.https://www.tetadventurer.com/2019/05/hydration-campaign-uhawareyou.html
2. http://www.979homeradio.com/index.php/uhawareyou-83-of-filipino-kids-are-not-drinking-enough/
4. https://twitter.com/hashtag/UhawAreYou?src=hash