Designed to educate the nation and encourage healthy hydration habits, the campaign is urging people to frequently check the colour of their urine, setting the nation a goal to ‘Keep It Light’.
Sir Steve Redgrave, five times Olympic gold medallist, is supporting the campaign and says, “Improving hydration habits is an easy way to improve performance in everyday life. It’s the same message for athletes, taxi drivers, office workers and busy mums.”
Currently, two in every three Brits are dehydrated, and while our bodies offer an accurate visual detector to ascertain hydration levels, namely the colour of our pee, ‘Keep It Light!’ has found a widespread lack of understanding of what the campaign’s leaders claim to be ‘simple biology’. Their findings show that 93% of office workers either don’t check and/or don’t know what the colour indicates.
‘Keep It Light!’ has been launched in response to the shocking results from a workplace hydration survey, which uncovered an overwhelming lack of hydration knowledge in the UK. Funded by Juice Doctor on behalf of ‘Keep It Light!’, the survey polled over 1,000 UK office workers and questioned them about hydration-related issues, such as their office drinking habits and how they identify and treat dehydration.
Our bodies have a natural early warning system for helping us know when we’re dehydrated, namely the colour of our pee. However, the survey has shown that less than one-third of people (27.10%) admitted to checking the colour of their urine to see if they’re dehydrated. Even worse, only 7% of them (the more vigilant) said they notice when their urine is an odd colour, and when they do, they don’t know what it means.
To spread the ‘Keep it Light!’ message, Sir Steve Redgrave and Juice Doctor have enlisted the help of some of the UK’s leading companies, including Birds Eye, Plantronics, The RNLI and TalkTalk, to help educate the British workforce about hydration by providing their employees with posters, fact sheets and other hydration resources.
The ‘Keep It Light!’ website includes a downloadable personal ‘Y’urindicator’ chart from Juice Doctor, which is designed as a pee-tone colour chart to help identify the stages of hydration, as well as other free materials to post up in washrooms, rest areas and offices.
Source: Juice Doctor
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