The health and economic burden of desalination-related magnesium deficiency

Maya Sadeh, Nadav Davidovitch, Itamar Grotto, Alex Weinreb

Research output: Book/ReportReportpeer-review

Abstract

The prolonged water crisis that Israel suffered from for decades has been curbed thanks to desalination plants, but a side effect of that solution has created an unexpected health problem- a magnesium deficiency. A new study by the Taub Center, conducted by researchers from the Taub Center Research and Policy Initiative for Environment and Health- Maya Sadeh, Prof. Itamar Grotto, Prof. Nadav Davidovitch, and Prof. Alex Weinreb - examined the health and economic impacts of magnesium deficiency, a mineral critical to human health. The study found that this deficiency increases the prevalence of type 2 diabetes and ischemic stroke. Before the desalination era, natural water provided 10%–20% of magnesium intake in Israel, but in desalinated water - now comprising the water supplied to about 70% of Israel’s households - there is no magnesium at all. The good news is that this extra burden of disease can be avoided: by adding magnesium back into desalinated water, it is possible to reduce illness rates and save the healthcare system hundreds of millions of shekels --
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationJerusalem
PublisherTaub Center for Social Policy Studies in Israel
Number of pages42
StatePublished - Sep 2024

Publication series

NameTaub Center Research and Policy Initiative for Environment and Health research paper
PublisherTaub Center for Social Policy Studies in Israel
Volumeno. 3

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