logo
Electrolyte sachets are everywhere – but will they cure a festival hangover?

Electrolyte sachets are everywhere – but will they cure a festival hangover?

The Guardian15-06-2025
The tickets are bought, the line-ups have been announced and it's nearly time to drag last year's tent out of the cupboard for a wipedown – and to evict a few dead earwigs. And this summer, there's one more festival accessory that partygoers won't be travelling without: electrolyte tablets.
Touted as a faster route to rehydration than water, and a way to replace vital salts lost during heavy drinking and partying, the focus on festivals is the latest twist in a global boom for electrolytes, as everyone from triathletes to YouTubers sings the praises of these super-hydrating mineral supplements.
Happy Tuesdays is selling 'all-night electrolytes' for party people; Holy Hydration says its hydration powders are perfect for athletes and party people, replacing electrolytes and minerals lost from sweating; while ORS Hydration claims its tablets can help people to prevent or recover from hangovers. The UK health food chain Holland & Barrett is promoting electrolyte sachets and magnesium water as 'festival essentials'.
But can they really take the edge off a hangover, or soften the infamous 'Tuesday blues' that follow a weekend flirtation with substances of a less legal kind?
Electrolytes are minerals that are vital for basic bodily functions, such as regulating fluid levels, transmitting nerve impulses and ensuring the blood doesn't become too acidic. The main electrolytes are sodium, potassium, chloride, magnesium, calcium, phosphate and bicarbonates.
'They are carefully regulated within specific ranges in the body. This is because levels outside the normal ranges – either too high or too low – can lead to life-threatening complications,' said Dr Sammie Gill, a specialist gastroenterology dietitian and spokesperson for the British Dietetic Association.
Fortunately, our bodies do an excellent job of maintaining the correct balance of these chemicals, with the kidneys playing a key role – so for healthy people, day to day, taking electrolyte supplements is unnecessary, Gill said. 'There are so many foods that are rich in electrolytes, including plant-based foods and dairy. It's not something people should be concerned about.'
One scenario where a healthy person might need electrolytes is after a bout of vomiting or diarrhoea. This can cause significant fluid loss and upset the body's balance of essential minerals like sodium and potassium, In severe cases, rehydrating with a properly balanced solution – such as oral rehydration salts – can be life-saving.
Electrolytes may be useful in other situations – 'for example, during periods of intense or prolonged exercise over an hour in duration, and especially in hot climates, or if the individual is a particular heavy sweater', said Gill.
And while partying in a sun-baked field isn't quite the same as running a marathon, it could, in theory lead to dehydration – meaning electrolytes may be useful here as well. That said, Gill said if you truly need electrolyte support, it's easy enough to make your own. 'Simply mix 200ml of water, 300ml of fruit juice and a pinch of salt,' she said. 'Cow's milk is also a naturally a rich source of electrolytes, including sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium. You're also getting additional nutrients, such as protein, that electrolyte supplements do not deliver.'
Whether electrolyte sachets can ease hangovers or soften the crash after taking recreational drugs is another matter. A recent review of UK hangover products available on Amazon found that most contain modest amounts of potassium, sodium and vitamin C. But although dehydration is often blamed for the misery that follows a night of drinking, the science tells a more nuanced story.
When researchers led by Joris Verster at Utrecht University reviewed the evidence last year, they found that although alcohol does cause some fluid loss, dehydration and hangovers appear to be parallel outcomes of drinking, rather than one causing the other.
In other words, although people often feel thirsty the morning after drinking, and may also feel terrible, thirst doesn't reliably predict the intensity of a hangover – and drinking water during or after alcohol consumption has only a modest effect on symptoms.
'Yes, thirst and dry mouth are common the next morning, and an electrolyte sachet might help with those symptoms, but it won't touch the main symptoms like headache, nausea, fatigue, or hangxiety,' said Dr Blair Aitken at Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, who investigates the impact of recreational drugs on cognition. 'Current research points to inflammation, oxidative stress, and acetaldehyde buildup as the key drivers of hangovers, not fluid or electrolyte loss.'
Nor are they a cure for post-MDMA or ecstasy comedowns, Aitken said. These are thought to be driven by a temporary dip in serotonin, poor sleep, dehydration, and general physical and mental exhaustion. 'You can't simply restore a complex neurochemical system with a supplement and expect to feel normal again,' he said.
Interestingly, a small 2022 study from Imperial College London found no mood decline following MDMA-assisted therapy in clinical settings. 'The authors suggested that the typical comedown might be more about context and expectation than the drug itself,' said Aitken.
Some ingredients in rave recovery packs, may offer a small lift – hydration, sugar, perhaps some caffeine or other energy boosters, but they are not cures. 'The best you can do to support recovery would be sleep, hydration, food and time,' said Aitken.
That said, using electrolyte tablets after a night of dancing, sweating and consuming drugs or alcohol, is unlikely to be harmful, he added. 'If people want to use them for a bit of post-party support, that's fine – just don't expect a miracle fix.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Anti-vax conspiracy theorist mother repeatedly interrupted paramedics as they tried to save her cancer-stricken daughter's life, inquest hears
Anti-vax conspiracy theorist mother repeatedly interrupted paramedics as they tried to save her cancer-stricken daughter's life, inquest hears

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Anti-vax conspiracy theorist mother repeatedly interrupted paramedics as they tried to save her cancer-stricken daughter's life, inquest hears

An anti-vax conspiracy theorist accused of persuading her cancer-stricken daughter to reject conventional medicine interrupted paramedics who were trying to give her emergency care as she lay dying, an inquest heard. Cambridge graduate Paloma Shemirani, 23, died at the Royal Sussex County Hospital in July last year after declining assistance for non-Hodgkin lymphoma which doctors say was treatable. Her mother, Kay 'Kate' Shemirani – who attracted a large social media following after sharing Covid-19 conspiracy theories – claims the real responsibility for her daughter's death lies with medical staff who 'administered drugs without her consent' and was given an 'overdose' by the 999 crew who attended her. However, the first paramedic on the scene told the inquest at Kent and Medway Coroner's Court Mrs Shemirani 'presented a challenge' to the ambulance crew who were trying to save Paloma's life. Robin Bass, of the South-East Coast Ambulance Service, said: 'The patient's mother presented a challenge. 'She kept interrupting while the crew were carrying out care.' Mr Bass, an experienced paramedic for the South-East Coast Ambulance Service, told how Mrs Shemirani told him that Paloma had a 'lymphoma' or growth in her chest but denied that she was suffering from cancer. He said: 'The patient's mother reported that the patient had been discharged from hospital and was not receiving active treatment and was receiving alternative treatment. Her mother, Kay 'Kate' Shemirani claims the real responsibility for her daughter's death lies with medical staff who 'administered drugs without her consent' and was given an 'overdose' by the 999 crew who attended her 'When I stated to the ambulance crew that this could be cancer, the mother said it was not and that it was a recent event. 'She was focused on the choking from food. 'I gave reassurance that the patient was being given the best possible care.' Mr Bass told the inquest that following the incident he had completed a safeguarding report due to Mrs Shemirani He told the court: 'There was concern over refusal of treatment and possible influence of the patient's mother.' During almost two hours of ferocious and at times bad tempered cross questioning from Mrs Shemirani the wrong-sized medical equipment to administer emergency care to 'slim' Paloma. A second paramedic, Karen Clark, told the inquest that she administered three doses of adrenaline to Paloma who did not have a pulse or a heartbeat, despite frantic medical attention. However, Mrs Shemirani accused her of killing her daughter with an overdose of the powerful revival drug. She asked Karen Clark: 'Are you aware that adrenaline can kill?' Miss Clark replied: 'I did not overdose the patient. 'At no point did Paloma have a pulse or a heartbeat. 'If a patient is in cardiac arrest, it's not possible for me to kill them.' Kate Shemirani claimed that her daughter Paloma was killed by an overdose of adrenaline and that medical services had conspired to cover up their involvement in her death. She also challenged South-East Coast Ambulance paramedic Daniel Cody about a report he wrote that initially reported that Paloma had been given four doses of adrenaline by the 999 crews – in contravention with good practice. Previously the inquest has heard from Paloma's twin brother Gabriel (pictured) who claimed that his sister had died because their mother had 'obstructed' her from receiving cancer treatment Paramedic Daniel Cody told the court that he had made an 'error' in this report and that his colleagues had not given the patient a fourth dose of adrenaline, but that a different drug had been administered by the Helicopter Emergency Service Medical Service [HEMS] team. A fourth dose of adrenaline was given later by the HEMS team. In an emotional outburst Mrs Shemirani told the court: 'If one could be a conspiracy theorist, I could say there has been a big conspiracy cover up. 'That would be my opinion.' The inquest also heard from Dr David Bentley who was also scrambled to Uckfield to help treat Paloma after she collapsed at home while eating. Dr Bentley told the court that he believed that the 23-year-old suffered breathing difficulties due to a cancer tumour blocking her airway. He said: 'I suspected that her breathing difficulty was caused by the tumour.' Dr Bentley was questioned intensively by Mrs Shemirani about his use of adrenaline to resuscitate Paloma. She said: 'I'm going to ask this question as the mother of my daughter. 'In all of the [medical] literature, it's very clear that an overdose of adrenaline causes the symptoms [that Paloma suffered en route to hospital] - pink frothy mucus pouring from her nose and pulmonary oedema.' Dr Bentley replied: 'I'm disagreeing that an overdose of adrenaline did cause the incidents in the ambulance.' Previously the inquest has heard from Paloma's twin brother Gabriel who claimed that his sister had died because their mother had 'obstructed' her from receiving cancer treatment. He said: 'I blame my mother entirely for my sister's death. 'In short I believe that she sacrificed Paloma's life for her own principles, I believe that she should be held accountable for Paloma's death.' Yesterday Gabriel asked each of the paramedics whether his mother's decision to call a friend before dialling 999 after Paloma had collapsed while eating had affected her chance of survival. Both replied that it was impossible to say. He also thanked each of them for trying to save his sister's life. He told each of them: 'Thank you from the bottom of my heart for your efforts trying to save my sister's life.' Paloma's brother Gabriel thanked Dr Bentley 'greatly' for his efforts trying to save his sister's life. He added: 'I would like to apologise for the moronic questions put to you by my parents.' At the time of Paloma's initial cancer diagnosis in autumn 2023, she was estranged from her mother, but then came under her influence, the inquest has heard. The inquest was adjourned until 27th August. Coroner Catherine Wood told the court she is expected to give her findings on the 3rd September. Ms Shemirani was struck off as a nurse in 2021, and a Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) committee found she had spread Covid-19 misinformation that 'put the public at a significant risk of harm'.

Labour ‘misled' public over NHS waiting lists
Labour ‘misled' public over NHS waiting lists

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Labour ‘misled' public over NHS waiting lists

Labour has 'misled' the public about the reasons why the NHS waiting list has fallen, two leading think tanks have warned. Wes Streeting, the Health Secretary, had said the 260,000 drop in the NHS backlog since the general election 'was not a coincidence', adding that it was because of 'record investment and fundamental NHS reform'. But a new Quality Watch report – a joint project between the Nuffield Trust and Health Foundation think tanks – found 245,000 appointments were being removed every month because patients died, had treatment elsewhere or moved abroad, rather than because treatment had finished. Some 2.4 million appointments and operations have been removed from the NHS backlog since Labour took power as part of a so-called 'validation process', which involves deleting any appointments for patients hospitals no longer think need to be seen. The researchers had to calculate the figures manually because they are not explicitly reported in NHS data, and said ministers should be more 'transparent' in their paper, first reported by the Health Service Journal on Wednesday. They calculated the total removals by looking at the number of appointments taken from the 'expected waiting list' that then did not appear in the 'reported waiting list' as either waiting or having finished treatment. The authors pointed out that even the NHS's 'own data shows it is still treating fewer patients than are being referred'. 'Government was not clear' For example, when Mr Streeting said the waiting list had fallen during April 'for the first time in 17 years', the researchers pointed out that on an average working day that month, there were 13,141 people being added to the backlog but 14,608 being deleted without undergoing treatment. The Quality Watch report said the Government does not make the impact of validation and other 'unreported removals' sufficiently clear. The research, authored by Georgia Watson and Dr Elizabeth Fisher of the Nuffield Trust, said: 'Until more transparent reporting is provided, accountability around unreported removals remains impossible and the planned care waiting list will continue to be a misleading indicator of how the NHS is dealing with demand. 'While the waiting list has started to go down, unreported removals have gone up. In fact, they have repeatedly outnumbered the additional incomplete referrals that join the waiting list every month,' they wrote. 'This tells us that, across several months, there were more [appointment referrals] being removed from the waiting list without being marked as complete than [new referrals] joining the list.' They said the monthly removals of almost a quarter of a million equate 'to around 3 per cent of the waiting list'. Patients who no longer need appointments have always been removed from the waiting list but they have recently had a 'more noticeable impact'. 'Since September 2023, this shift has helped the NHS get control of the waiting list, even while according to its own data it is still treating fewer patients than are being referred,' the report said. 'We are freeing up capacity' A Department of Health spokesman said: 'Our drive to clear the huge waiting list backlog we inherited includes making sure all patients are getting the right treatment as quickly as possible. 'That's why we are supporting GPs to seek specialist advice before making referrals, and screening existing waiting lists to check that all patients need to be on there, freeing up capacity to get more people seen more quickly. 'This is one element of our wider work to cut waiting times for patients and improve productivity through our Plan for Change, through which we have already delivered over 4 million extra appointments and cut the waiting list by 260,000.' An NHS spokesman said: 'NHS staff have made significant progress in reducing waiting lists in the last year – down by more than 260,000 since June 2024 – and this is driven by the fact that 2,300 more patients are receiving treatment every day compared to last year. 'While the validation process has a small impact on the overall waiting list – as is made crystal clear in our published monthly waiting list data – it's right we regularly clinically review those waiting so hospitals can prioritise patients more accurately and deploy their resources efficiently.'

Healthcare in Gaza facing 'catastrophe' amid food shortages
Healthcare in Gaza facing 'catastrophe' amid food shortages

The National

time2 hours ago

  • The National

Healthcare in Gaza facing 'catastrophe' amid food shortages

Dr Alaa Al-Sharif, an emergency physician at a hospital in Gaza City, said food shortages in the region were impacting on doctors' abilities to treat patients – with more than 100 people presenting injuries every day. It comes as the amount raised by Scots for the Disaster Emergency Committee's (DEC) Middle East Humanitarian Appeal has reached £4.1 million. The funds go directly to charity partners in the region, with a portion also going towards aid efforts in the West Bank and Lebanon. READ MORE: Why I'm wearing this simple T-shirt to my Edinburgh Festival events The DEC is a UK-based organisation bringing together 15 leading aid charities working to provide humanitarian assistance. Huw Owen, from the DEC in Scotland, told The National: "The situation in Gaza right now is catastrophic. "DEC charities and their incredible local staff and partners are doing everything they can in unimaginably dire conditions to deliver whatever support is possible, but it's clear that the need for safe and sustained access for humanitarian aid has never been more urgent." Owen added: "Despite the enormous challenges, donations to the Middle East Humanitarian Appeal are making a difference to people in desperate need of aid, and we're incredibly grateful to people across Scotland for their continued support for our work." Money raised from the appeal has helped to rehabilitate medical facilities such as the Al-Saraya field hospital in Gaza City – run by the Palestine Red Crescent Society – including the provision of 100 oxygen cylinders to support emergency response and respiratory care. Doctors in Gaza have repeatedly warned of the immense challenges they are facing trying to treat people with limited access to resources. Dr Alaa Al-Sharif, an emergency physician at the Al-Saraya Field Hospital, said patients were having to lie on the ground for treatment due to a lack of beds. (Image: Aya Matrabie / Fairpicture / DEC) He also said that food shortages – caused by Israel's blockade on Gaza – were having an immense impact on the hospital staff and their ability to care for patients. Al-Sharif said: "The situation is no secret, it is catastrophic. "All hospitals, whether here or elsewhere, don't have enough beds, so patients are forced to lie on the ground. READ MORE: 'Disgusting' vandalism of Scottish Unesco heritage site condemned "Whether they're on a mattress or not, we're forced to treat them on the floor, administering medication and examining them while they lie there." Al-Sharif added that doctors are seeing no fewer than 100 injuries every 24 hours. Om Salman, whose son is currently at the Al-Saraya Field Hospital, said her family was in a "hopeless situation". (Image: Aya Matrabie / Fairpicture / DEC) Her son Salman was injured three weeks ago when he went out to buy falafel for his children. He was shot in the neck, with the bullet damaging his spinal cord, causing complete paralysis. "He can't move his legs, hands, or anything at all," Salman said. "My son needs care, food and water. I swear to God, here in Gaza we can barely get a bite of food let alone access treatment. "We are in a hopeless situation. My son's daughter is eight or nine years old, and she looks like a skeleton, every bone in her body is visible." She added: "It's due to lack of nutrition. There is no food, no water, nothing available to eat." The names of Om and her son have been changed to protect their identities. You can click here to donate to the DEC's Middle East Humanitarian Appeal.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store