> You would have to try VERY hard to drink too much water.
On what do you base this claim? I think it's badly overstated. I'd say instead that it depends on circumstance. Seated in an air-conditioned office, you might be right. But if you are doing endurance athletics in a hot desert environment, it can be both easy and dangerous to drink too much plain water: https://www.trainingpeaks.com/blog/the-dangers-of-hyponatrem...
I think it’s clear from context we are not talking about a desert endurance race. I would hope anyone engaged in such an endeavor would be working with a doctor to help set their own guidelines.
> Hyponatremia occurs in a substantial fraction of nonelite marathon runners and can be severe.
> As marathon running has surged in popularity during the past quarter-century, reports have emerged of serious illness and death from hyponatremia, as in the case of a 28-year-old woman who died after the 2002 Boston Marathon.
> Participants in the 2002 Boston Marathon were recruited … 488 runners (64 percent) provided a usable blood sample at the finish line. Thirteen percent had hyponatremia (a serum sodium concentration of 135 mmol per liter or less); 0.6 percent had critical hyponatremia (120 mmol per liter or less).
Also the Grand Canyon, which attracts much more people than the Boston Marathon:
However, a 6-year study reported that exercise-associated hyponatremia, dehydration, and heat exhaustion occurred at nearly the same rate, prompting re-examination of emergency protocols. Most exercise-associated hyponatremia cases at the Grand Canyon occur among summer hikers to the inner Canyon and are often misdiagnosed as exertional heat illness due to overlapping signs and symptoms.
Hyponatremia is especially dangerous because a common response is to drink even more water, which makes the condition even worse. The National Park Service changed all their hiking advice to explicitly recommend "salty snacks" and "sports drinks".
How representative of the overall population are marathon runners? Let's be honest here, this is not at all representative of the average person, who is at no risk of over-hydration.
On what do you base this claim? I think it's badly overstated. I'd say instead that it depends on circumstance. Seated in an air-conditioned office, you might be right. But if you are doing endurance athletics in a hot desert environment, it can be both easy and dangerous to drink too much plain water: https://www.trainingpeaks.com/blog/the-dangers-of-hyponatrem...