The root of the issue (apart from corruption, oppression, lack of educational system etc...) is that they get paid next to nothing so they have no choice but to do strenuous work for crazy hours - in intense heat and humidity, with inadequate hydration and nutrition, and insufficient sleep - in order to survive.
That is, of course, impossible. So they get by with a cocktail of painkillers and energy drinks, which then obviously just kills them.
Surely anyone could figure that out in a few days of just observing how the people live, even if the actual cause of illness/death - kidney failure - might not have been as obvious. I suppose that's what eventually happened once a lot of young men started presenting with kidney failure - but it took such an extreme situation for anyone to care at all.
There's also the problem that these countries are utterly addicted to sugar and caffeine. People often literally speak with pride about how much soda and energy drinks they consume - completely unaware of the issues they cause (diabetes, kidney issues, obesity, tooth rot, etc...). They get offended when I politely decline their honorable (and expensive) offer of soda when I visit their homes. If they push me on it, I say and explain that "it's poison", which obviously just confuses and offends them further.
The solution seems obvious as well - pay them more, as well as provide actual education so that, at the very least, they aren't having too many children at too young of an age. Then they wouldn't need to work so many hours, and have some conception of healthy living.
That won't happen though, due to corruption, oppression etc - they prefer an incapable, ignorant, and even less efficient underclass to one that can take care of and think for itself.
Kudos to the guys, though, for actually sticking around and providing for their families - there's also an epidemic of complete deadbeat dads who abandon their families, leaving an uneducated woman who has even fewer job prospects to raise them.
What sort of warped ivory tower thinking is this? It's just self-evident that water is utterly crucial in a setting like this. Why would you only hydrate half of them, in the name of "science"? Give your head a shake
FAR better to hydrate everyone, and then look for OTHER factors that might be causing it. Yet, that's self evident as well - too much exertion for too long in too hot/humid climate, with inadequate nutrition and sleep. And then adding caffeine and painkiller addictions on top of it.
No, you can leave the sauna any time you want and go cool down, so there shouldn't ever be any damage done from the heat really. Unless, of course, you purposefully stay there way past being uncomfortable, but that's not really what a sauna is about
Reducing sodium intake in people susceptible to developing high blood pressure from it does wonders, but in everyone else it's pretty much okay, and if you're young it's better to eat too much than too little. I doubt it's a factor here.
but they did mention taking ibuprofen, which, if you have CKD, they tell you not to do - i understand this is prior to diagnosis, but they weren't doing themselves any favors.
The real mystery is how this is a mystery to these "researchers"...
Here's a vastly better article about the same situation in Guatemala. Just let your browser translate it for you.
https://no-ficcion.com/hasta-que-los-rinones-aguanten/
The root of the issue (apart from corruption, oppression, lack of educational system etc...) is that they get paid next to nothing so they have no choice but to do strenuous work for crazy hours - in intense heat and humidity, with inadequate hydration and nutrition, and insufficient sleep - in order to survive.
That is, of course, impossible. So they get by with a cocktail of painkillers and energy drinks, which then obviously just kills them.
Surely anyone could figure that out in a few days of just observing how the people live, even if the actual cause of illness/death - kidney failure - might not have been as obvious. I suppose that's what eventually happened once a lot of young men started presenting with kidney failure - but it took such an extreme situation for anyone to care at all.
There's also the problem that these countries are utterly addicted to sugar and caffeine. People often literally speak with pride about how much soda and energy drinks they consume - completely unaware of the issues they cause (diabetes, kidney issues, obesity, tooth rot, etc...). They get offended when I politely decline their honorable (and expensive) offer of soda when I visit their homes. If they push me on it, I say and explain that "it's poison", which obviously just confuses and offends them further.
The solution seems obvious as well - pay them more, as well as provide actual education so that, at the very least, they aren't having too many children at too young of an age. Then they wouldn't need to work so many hours, and have some conception of healthy living.
That won't happen though, due to corruption, oppression etc - they prefer an incapable, ignorant, and even less efficient underclass to one that can take care of and think for itself.
Kudos to the guys, though, for actually sticking around and providing for their families - there's also an epidemic of complete deadbeat dads who abandon their families, leaving an uneducated woman who has even fewer job prospects to raise them.
Sounds like some experiments could be done to narrow this down.
For example giving half of workers a water bottle and telling them to fill it with water and keep it on their person all day.
See if those workers have better kidney function at the end of the year. Simple dehydration could be an easy fix.
What sort of warped ivory tower thinking is this? It's just self-evident that water is utterly crucial in a setting like this. Why would you only hydrate half of them, in the name of "science"? Give your head a shake
FAR better to hydrate everyone, and then look for OTHER factors that might be causing it. Yet, that's self evident as well - too much exertion for too long in too hot/humid climate, with inadequate nutrition and sleep. And then adding caffeine and painkiller addictions on top of it.
This was a twenty five year old mystery around the world in 2014. Probably no easy solution. https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2019/08/26/7538343...
https://archive.ph/EFVba
Shouldn't we see an elevated number of cases in countries with a sauna culture?
No, you can leave the sauna any time you want and go cool down, so there shouldn't ever be any damage done from the heat really. Unless, of course, you purposefully stay there way past being uncomfortable, but that's not really what a sauna is about
I find it curious that there is no mention of salts, either sodium or potassium, in the entire article!
Reducing sodium intake in people susceptible to developing high blood pressure from it does wonders, but in everyone else it's pretty much okay, and if you're young it's better to eat too much than too little. I doubt it's a factor here.
but they did mention taking ibuprofen, which, if you have CKD, they tell you not to do - i understand this is prior to diagnosis, but they weren't doing themselves any favors.
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