Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Billie Eilish Shares Details of Her Tourette’s Syndrome and Suppressing Her Tics in Interviews

Billie Eilish Shares Details of Her Tourette’s Syndrome and Suppressing Her Tics in Interviews

May 8, 2026
Ex-Knick and NBA champion P.J. Tucker retires after 19 seasons

Ex-Knick and NBA champion P.J. Tucker retires after 19 seasons

May 8, 2026
Live quantum network test in New York overcomes 2 key hurdles in creating an ‘unhackable’ internet

Live quantum network test in New York overcomes 2 key hurdles in creating an ‘unhackable’ internet

May 8, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Billie Eilish Shares Details of Her Tourette’s Syndrome and Suppressing Her Tics in Interviews
  • Ex-Knick and NBA champion P.J. Tucker retires after 19 seasons
  • Live quantum network test in New York overcomes 2 key hurdles in creating an ‘unhackable’ internet
  • Foreskin reconstruction is dividing penis doctors — inside the promises and pitfalls
  • California Democrat was probed in 2023 for unwanted advances towards two young female interns
  • Kent says US intel community agreed before war that Iran wasn’t developing nuke
  • ‘The Hunting Party’ Shows Main Character Getting Shot in Season 2 Finale Before Surprise Twist
  • Brendan Beck’s long-awaited big league debut with Yankees felt like a ‘dream’
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » The sneaky saboteur that may be raising your blood pressure — especially if you live in a coastal area
The sneaky saboteur that may be raising your blood pressure — especially if you live in a coastal area
Health

The sneaky saboteur that may be raising your blood pressure — especially if you live in a coastal area

News RoomBy News RoomApril 17, 20265 ViewsNo Comments

It’s like salt in a wound.

Global warming has been blamed for stronger and more frequent storms, droughts, floods and rare disease outbreaks. Now, it might be fueling kitchen table health crises, too.

Researchers are concerned that rising sea levels are contaminating fresh drinking water with seawater — and that the extra salt could have the same effect on blood pressure as key risk factors like inactivity.

A recent analysis of data on water salinity and global human health outcomes revealed a bitter pattern: People who drank saltier water, most often in coastal communities, had higher systolic and diastolic blood pressure on average and were 26% more likely to develop hypertension, or chronic high blood pressure that can lead to major cardiac events. 

The increases in blood pressure were “modest,” per the report, as food remains most people’s main source of sodium.

But compared to other cardiovascular risk factors like physical inactivity — which increases risk of hypertension by anywhere from 15% to 25% — salty drinking water emerges as a significant concern. 

Especially for the more than 3 billion people who live close to a coast worldwide.

Coastal geologist Robert Young told The Post that the increasing volume of the ocean — what we call sea level rise — also “raises coastal groundwater everywhere.” 

Groundwater runs downhill, but when shorelines are eroded by rising seas, there’s no more slope. What you get is a slosh of sea- and groundwater — like you’re “backing up the plumbing.”

Young, who is also the director of the Program for the Study of Developed Shorelines at Western Carolina University, said that in some places, the saltwater infiltrates the freshwater groundwater that we drink.

The salinity of your drinking water depends heavily on where it comes from.

Dr. Rajiv Chowdhury, professor and chair of Global Health at Florida International University, told The Post that water salinity is especially concerning for coastal dwellers in low- and middle-income countries who are “generally more vulnerable for their reliance on shallow wells or groundwater as main drinking sources.” 

Compared to wealthier regions like the US, they may also have fewer resources for water-quality monitoring, contamination mitigation or water treatment plant relocation.

But plenty of Americans are vulnerable to these changes, too. Chowdhury, an author of the new study, said parts of the Gulf Coast and coastal Louisiana are particularly at risk, as is South Florida, which is reliant on the Everglades — one of the best-documented cases of saltwater intrusion in this country — for its drinking water.

Outside of those regions, “the real concern [right now] is typically individual wells,” Young said. “People on their own well water have less control of all of this than municipal water,” which has to meet relatively strict guidelines and is subject to routine testing. 

“When we start to see municipal water treatment facilities getting an uptick in salinity […] that should be flashing red lights for every place else.”

Dr. Robert Young, coastal geologist

For that reason, saltier water “can cause problems” for cities that might soon have to invest in treatment facility updates to handle the salinity.

Drinking water has been under the microscope a lot lately, with increased pressure from Make America Healthy Again advocates to remove toxins that are known to be widespread. 

Compared to more “ubiquitous” issues like PFAS and microplastics, Young said that water salinity — given that, “at the moment at least,” it’s mostly only relevant to low-lying coastal populations — isn’t at the top of the fix-it list.

But that’s exactly why now is the right time to put contingency plans in place. 

If sea levels continue to rise at the rate scientists expect — 7.2 feet by the year 2100 — water salinity and potential cardiovascular risk will also continue to climb. And not just down South. 

Just a few feet of sea level rise will not only leach saltwater into the ground, but it will also push it into rivers and estuaries. The current infrastructure used to process river water for local taps wouldn’t cut it. 

“Those water treatment facilities are not set up to handle saltwater. They’re set up to make freshwater drinkable, but saltwater is a whole other can of worms,” Young said. “You don’t want to be running salt water through all of your equipment; it’s corrosive.”

Desalinating water and constructing reverse osmosis plants are two “energy-intensive and expensive ways to make freshwater.” A solution that’s been proposed in vulnerable countries like Bangladesh is known as managed aquifer recharge, or the underground storage of reclaimed freshwater for later use.

Hypertension is already of urgent concern in the US, where, in 2023, it contributed to an estimated 664,470 deaths.

To balance out a sodium spike in the water, Chowdhury recommends a hypertension protocol: Cutting down on salty foods, eating potassium-rich fruits and vegetables and regularly monitoring blood pressure.

Though salty drinking water is not yet a widespread issue in the US, Young said that rising seas will eventually force our hand, especially given the public health threats that are surfacing.

We have the choice to act before it really starts to sting.

“When we start to see municipal water treatment facilities getting an uptick in salinity […] that should be flashing red lights for every place else,” he said. 

“I’m not terribly optimistic that we’re gonna do too much about it until it becomes a real expensive problem for somebody. Then maybe we’ll pay attention.”

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Foreskin reconstruction is dividing penis doctors — inside the promises and pitfalls

Foreskin reconstruction is dividing penis doctors — inside the promises and pitfalls

A third of Americans think crucial cancer-prevention tactic is unnecessary

A third of Americans think crucial cancer-prevention tactic is unnecessary

Staying up all night can fill your brain with Alzheimer’s proteins — why it can create a vicious cycle for older people

Staying up all night can fill your brain with Alzheimer’s proteins — why it can create a vicious cycle for older people

Can ivermectin cure hantavirus? Controversial Covid treatment touted for rat disease outbreak

Can ivermectin cure hantavirus? Controversial Covid treatment touted for rat disease outbreak

Gen Z’ers on SSRIs are finally starting to question the risks — and are agreeing with RFK Jr.

Gen Z’ers on SSRIs are finally starting to question the risks — and are agreeing with RFK Jr.

Exclusive | Med Spa USA! How Botox havens have taken over millions of square feet across America

Exclusive | Med Spa USA! How Botox havens have taken over millions of square feet across America

Hantavirus countdown: How long it takes for incurable virus to kill, from initial exposure to deadly complications

Hantavirus countdown: How long it takes for incurable virus to kill, from initial exposure to deadly complications

How many crunches, squats and pushups you should be able to do at every age — as Trump brings back Presidential Fitness Test

How many crunches, squats and pushups you should be able to do at every age — as Trump brings back Presidential Fitness Test

Former ‘bad for you’ food can actually lower your Alzheimer’s risk by up to 27%

Former ‘bad for you’ food can actually lower your Alzheimer’s risk by up to 27%

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Ex-Knick and NBA champion P.J. Tucker retires after 19 seasons

Ex-Knick and NBA champion P.J. Tucker retires after 19 seasons

May 8, 2026
Live quantum network test in New York overcomes 2 key hurdles in creating an ‘unhackable’ internet

Live quantum network test in New York overcomes 2 key hurdles in creating an ‘unhackable’ internet

May 8, 2026
Foreskin reconstruction is dividing penis doctors — inside the promises and pitfalls

Foreskin reconstruction is dividing penis doctors — inside the promises and pitfalls

May 8, 2026
California Democrat was probed in 2023 for unwanted advances towards two young female interns

California Democrat was probed in 2023 for unwanted advances towards two young female interns

May 8, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Kent says US intel community agreed before war that Iran wasn’t developing nuke

Kent says US intel community agreed before war that Iran wasn’t developing nuke

May 8, 2026
‘The Hunting Party’ Shows Main Character Getting Shot in Season 2 Finale Before Surprise Twist

‘The Hunting Party’ Shows Main Character Getting Shot in Season 2 Finale Before Surprise Twist

May 8, 2026
Brendan Beck’s long-awaited big league debut with Yankees felt like a  ‘dream’

Brendan Beck’s long-awaited big league debut with Yankees felt like a ‘dream’

May 8, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.