Don't Drink the water and other digestive issues
In my travels to India in the past (I live in the US) the rule was always bottled water only and no raw fruits or veg. I am now taking a long term assignment in Hyderabad and would like any information on how long it would take to adapt to local water etc.
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Always use bottled water from a reliable outlet.
There will be larger, home sized bottles available to use with a water dispenser.
northst wrote:Hello!
In my travels to India in the past (I live in the US) the rule was always bottled water only and no raw fruits or veg. I am now taking a long term assignment in Hyderabad and would like any information on how long it would take to adapt to local water etc.
I came back from India last year after a 2 year stay there. I confirm everything here, do not drink the tap water. It is very risky. Always keep to mineral water. Even the Indians do. Actually it was an Indian who confirmed this information for me when I reached India in 2012.
Cheers,
Shaazia
"The world's a very scary place if you don't have chemistry...chemistry 101." Doctor Neil deGrasse Tyson
Dennis, as you state you're there only for a couple of weeks now. Why is it, do you think, that all those hundreds of thousands of Indians are drinking bottled water? They aren't the Perrier Sparkling Water set you know!
The overwhelming consensus even of the locals is DON'T DRINK THE WATER. That said, if you wish to ignore that advice and risk your health, far be it from us to stop you. Just make sure to show your degrees to the Emergency Ward medical staff when you're there, I'm sure they'll find them quite interesting.
Cheers,
James
Expat-blog Experts Team
It really appears that you're posting here just to stir the pot. Not a wise thing for a relatively new member to be doing, especially after a direct request from a member of Expat-blog Team and Expat-blog Experts Team to tone things down. I'd suggest strongly you re-evaluate your reasons for being here on the blog.
If it is your intention to make contacts here, do some networking and perhaps make a few friends along the way, it's not going to happen if you just raise everybody's hackles.
Cheers,
James   Expat-blog Experts Team
Foremost regards,
DT
The World Health Organization estimates that 97 million Indians lack access to safe water today, second only to China. As a result, the World Bank estimates that 21% of communicable diseases in India are related to unsafe water.
Many countries have poor water treatment, India being one of them.
Stick to drinking processed water.
Fred wrote:Never.
Always use bottled water from a reliable outlet.
There will be larger, home sized bottles available to use with a water dispenser.


Dennis Tedder wrote:I was just speaking as an expert in biochemistry. I'll not trouble the post again; sorry for the trouble.
Foremost regards,
DT
Not really.
You may well be an expert as you claim, but 454,367 people will disagree with your suggestion.
The ONLY sound advice here is - Don't drink tap water -It might very well kill you.
Dennis Tedder wrote:I was just speaking as an expert in biochemistry. I'll not trouble the post again; sorry for the trouble.
Foremost regards,
DT
I'm sorry, but for one who claims to be an "expert" in biochemistry to counsel anybody to drink tap water in any developing nation (politically correct term) is completely irresponsible.
Cheers,
James    Expat-blog Experts Team
However I drank sugarcane juice, ate any fruits sold on the market after washing them with tap water, and no problem. Street food is 100% safe, as it's freshly boiled.
Ah, yeah, I brush my teeth with tap water and nothing happens.
What bothers me more about tap water is what chemicals they might put into it to kill the bacteria - it's supposed to be unhealthy in big quantities. That's why RO water is better.
I caught stomach bugs twice, but the first time I literally swallowed some water from the toilet floor (I dropped earphones and without thinking much, tried to save them by sucking out water), and the second time I ate dirty mulberry from the tree at the roadside of a busy road (mulberry from the tree in a cleaner residential place was safe). So don't lick the toilet floor and keep your mulberry tree clean
Those stomach bugs are mild, although weird to a european... They happily go away with 2-3 days of antibiotic (in fact they went away with one dosage of antibiotic, I just kept taking it for 3 days for safety... it was Bactrim, but only because I had this one among my medication... any other would work too).
PS: I drink a lot of water in form of tea, so I could probably use tap water for it, it's anyway boiled... but it never made any sense - RO water is easily available either free of charge from society, or at a tiny price.
The risk is simply too great.
Of course, most will just get a bad stomach for a couple of days, but some will experience far worse, right up to death.
Our foul mouthed, now banned, biochemistry expert was talking out of his arse.
India is the center of "medical tourism".
What can you really get from water that's not curable? Some trouble, maybe yes... if you make sure to only drink tap water in great quantities. But I never do it even in first-world countries - it stinks of desinfectant.
Slightly expensive but nonetheless, the best way to purify water. Connect the purifier to your kitchen sink tap and drink the water.
In the previous one, there was no RO plant, but the water providers were cheap and many (like some 15 or 30 INR for 20 liters of water, not worth talking about).
For that money, I did not see any point to cook from tap water.
I hope you do live in some more or less civilised place - so if you dont have any of those paper ads from "paani waalas", just visit a couple of neighbours and ask them where they get RO water from.
Personally, I don´t see any need to BUY a RO purifier...
Better have a RO purifier at home and use the same purified water for drinking and cooking.
I am a native from Himachal pradesh and we use an electric RO water purifier for drinking and cooking. These days very few households in urban & semi-urban areas use direct tap water for same.While I stayed away from home in Mumbai for about 6 years in a flat , we got the 20 liters water cans ( pretty affordable)Â , home delivered by the shopkeeper for our drinking and cooking needs. Just make sure you buy those bottles from a good / big shop of your neighborhood ...
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