@thesanctuarysd: I love scalding hot showers. But all that steam you're breathing in? That chlorine becomes a chlorine gas. It's not just covering your skin. It's entering your airways and going directly into your bloodstream. If you have city water, you're getting chronic chlorine exposure every single day. And studies show 53% of women with breast cancer had higher chlorine concentrations in their breast tissue. It's mostly the vapor when it's hot. The chlorine getting into your system through your lungs. Check out the full episode on all platforms: "Hydrate With Tracy Duhs"
This isn’t accurate. Hot showers do not convert tap water chlorine into toxic chlorine gas. Municipal water contains chlorine or chloramine at very low ppm levels, dissolved in water. Heat can cause trace off-gassing, which is why you may smell it, but the concentrations measured in bathrooms are far below toxic or OSHA exposure limits.
Chlorine gas (Cl₂) is an industrial chemical that requires concentrations orders of magnitude higher than anything produced by household water. If showers produced chlorine gas at harmful levels, we would see widespread acute lung injury, which we do not.
The “53% of women with breast cancer had higher chlorine levels” claim is also misleading. Correlation is not causation, and there is no credible evidence showing normal shower exposure causes cancer. Major public health agencies have reviewed this extensively.
If someone notices irritation, that’s a comfort issue, not toxicity. Ventilation or a carbon filter can help, but framing hot showers as daily chlorine gas exposure is simply incorrect chemistry.
2026-02-06 05:51:04
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bass fisherman :
it's the deodorant for women..majority of breast cancer it's closer to armpit
2026-02-03 21:54:21
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