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Is it true you should wait 30 minutes after eating to swim?

Asked by Donna Vasquez — Mar 30, 2025 — Health Resolved

Every summer my mom wouldn't let us swim after lunch. She said you'll get cramps and drown. Is this actually true? Olympic swimmers eat before competing. Where did this rule come from? I'm coaching kids' swim team and parents are asking me about this. I don't want to give bad advice.

✓ Best Answer
admin — Score: 2

I'm not a doctor and you should definitely talk to your physician about this. That said, the general medical consensus seems to be that moderation is key. Most health concerns come from extremes in either direction.

7 Answers

✓ Best Answer
admin — Apr 1, 2025

I'm not a doctor and you should definitely talk to your physician about this. That said, the general medical consensus seems to be that moderation is key. Most health concerns come from extremes in either direction.

2
Bob Nakamura — Mar 31, 2025

Talk to a pharmacist — they're an underrated resource and they're free to talk to. They know a ton about medications and interactions and can tell you whether something is worth a doctor visit or whether an over-the-counter remedy will do.

3
Alice Hartwell — Mar 31, 2025

I had this same concern and went to see a specialist. It turned out to be much less serious than I thought. But getting professional medical advice gave me peace of mind. If you have insurance, use it — that's what it's for.

2
Avtoservis_gmei — Apr 1, 2025

I asked my doctor this exact question. They said most of what you read about this is overblown and the actual risk is small for a normal healthy person. The news loves a scary health headline. Ask your own doctor before you panic.

2
Avtoservis_inei — Apr 1, 2025

I'd get a second opinion if something doesn't sit right with you. Doctors are human and they make mistakes too. Nobody knows your own body better than you do. If your gut says something is wrong, keep pushing until you get answers.

2
Charlie Reeves — Apr 2, 2025

Be careful trusting health advice you find on the internet, including mine. There's a LOT of junk out there — supplement companies and diet gurus trying to sell you something. WebMD is decent for general info but it can't replace an actual doctor.

2
Avtoservis_hnei — Apr 1, 2025

My advice: don't self-diagnose using the internet. You'll convince yourself you have some rare terrible disease when it's probably nothing. I did this once and worked myself into a panic over what turned out to be a pulled muscle.

1

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