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U.S. healthcare groups push water fluoridation campaign
By Kathy Kincade, Editor in Chief

November 15, 2011 -- In response to what some say is a growing body of "misinformation" from antifluoride activists, three national healthcare organizations on Tuesday launched the Campaign for Dental Health, designed to educate the public about oral health and the need for U.S. states and communities to invest in water fluoridation and other forms of prevention.

Voices for America's Children, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the Pew Children's Dental Campaign are among the organizations partnering on the new campaign, but more than 20 state and national organizations are participating, according to Pew.

"As a country, we have made great strides in oral health for our kids," said Bill Bentley, president and CEO of Voices for America's Children, in a press conference announcing the campaign. "But as a country, we are still letting our children down. Some 16.5 million kids go without dental care every year in the U.S., and children are most susceptible to tooth decay."

“Antifluoride activists are using a number of arguments that misrepresent what the research says.”
— Shelley Gehshan, director, Children's
     Dental Health Campaign

The campaign will provide reliable, scientific information about oral health through its new website, iLikeMyTeeth.org, with particular emphasis on water fluoridation. The website will also link to FluorideScience.org, another site that will soon go public, providing policymakers and health officials with concise, reliable reviews of the research on fluoride.

"Water fluoridation is largely responsible for a tremendous decline in tooth decay among our children," Bentley said. "Simply put, it's a no-brainer. It helps the community protect its teeth without demanding people change their lifestyles, and it pays for itself through savings in Medicaid."

Currently, 72% of Americans whose homes are connected to public water systems receive drinking water that is fluoridated. Yet less than half of residents in nine states -- Hawaii, Idaho, Kansas, Louisiana, Montana, New Hampshire, New Jersey , Oregon, and Wyoming -- have access to fluoridated water. In all, more than 70 million Americans lack access to fluoridated water.

Although the overall rate of fluoridation continues to rise, a small but determined band of antifluoride activists is actively pressing communities not to fluoridate. These activists are using the Internet to raise unfounded fears and spread misinformation, ignoring the evidence showing that fluoridation is a safe, effective strategy.

"We are in an era where states and local budgets are under a tremendous strain, and communities need to ensure that what they are funding provides the most bang for the buck. Water fluoridation certainly does that," said Shelley Gehshan, director of the Children's Dental Health Campaign at the Pew Center on the States. "However, over the years there has a been a persistent effort by a very small group of activists to circulate inaccurate information and misleading facts to try and stop communities from fluoridating and roll back fluoridation in communities that already have it. And some communities wrongly believe they will save money by cutting fluoridation, but studies have shown that they will spend more in the long run."

In fact, elected officials in several communities from Alaska to Florida have voted recently to end water fluoridation. Some of these votes were prompted by unfounded fears about safety or the desire to save tax dollars -- a goal that is dispelled by evidence showing that most cities save $38 for every dollar spent on fluoridation, according to Pew.

"Public policy decisions about health should be based on sound science," Gehshan said. "Antifluoride activists are using a number of arguments that misrepresent what the research says. Opponents have tried to raise fears about fluoridation's safety by citing foreign studies of fluoride levels that were at least two or three times higher than the level used to fluoridate U.S. public water systems."

For the past 65 years, communities across the U.S. have been supplementing naturally occurring fluoride in their water supplies to reach a level considered sufficient to promote oral health, especially among children. The fluoride level long recommended by health officials to prevent caries has been set at a range of 0.7 to 1.2 milligrams per liter (mg/L) of water. Earlier this year, the Department of Health and Human Services proposed the level be set at 0.7 mg/L of water.

Water that is fluoridated at the optimum level, as recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is something parents can have confidence in, added Mary Brown, MD, former member of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Board of Directors.

"The AAP and others who have joined this campaign are concerned by the frightening messages that are being communicated to the public about water fluoridation," she said.

Mass. town says 'no' to fluoridation, November 14, 2011

Calif. water district sued over fluoridation program, August 12, 2011

Fluoridation debate nowhere near resolution, October 15, 2010

CDC releases new statistics on U.S. water fluoridation, September 17, 2010

53 U.S. cities vote against fluoridation, November 14, 2008


Copyright © 2011 DrBicuspid.com

Last Updated hh 11/16/2011 10:51:54 AM

5 comments so far ...
11/16/2011 7:21:52 AM
nyscof

There is clear evidence that small amounts of fluoride, at or near levels added to U.S. water supplies, present potential risks to the thyroid gland, according to the National Research Council�s (NRC) first-ever published review of the fluoride/thyroid literature. (2006)
�Many Americans are exposed to fluoride in the ranges associated with thyroid effects, especially for people with iodine deficiency,� says Kathleen Thiessen, PhD, co-author of the government-sponsored NRC report. �The recent decline in iodine intake in the U.S could contribute to increased toxicity of fluoride for some individuals,� says Thiessen.
�A low level of thyroid hormone can increase the risk of cardiac disease, high cholesterol, depression and, in pregnant woman, decreased intelligence of offspring,� said Thiessen.
Robert Carton, PhD, an environmental scientist who worked for over 30 years for the U.S. government including managing risk assessments on high priority toxic chemicals, says �fluoride has detrimental effects on the thyroid gland of healthy males at 3.5 mg a day. With iodine deficiency, the effect level drops to 0.7 milligrams/day for an average male.�
Among many others, the NRC Report cites human studies which show- fluoride concentrations in thyroids exceeding that found in other soft tissues except kidney
The chairman of the NRC fluoride panel, Dr. John Doull, Professor Emeritus of Pharmacology and Toxicology in the Department of Pharmacology, Toxicology and Therapeutics at the University of Kansas Medical School, revealed in a Scientific American article (Jan 2008) that the fluoride/thyroid connection worries him.
More than 3,825 professionals (including 328 dentists) urge that fluoridation be stopped citing scientific evidence that ingesting fluoride is ineffective at reducing tooth decay and has serious health risks. See statement: [link=http://www.fluoridealert.org/professionals-statement.aspx]http://www.fluoridealert.org/professionals-statement.aspx[/link]
HHS Assistant Secretary for Health, Dr. Howard Koh, says all infant formulas, either concentrated or ready-to-feed, already contain some fluoride and, when routinely mixed with fluoridated water, increase the risk of dental fluorosis (discolored teeth), in a video commentary published on Medscape.com, March 8, 2011
It seems many of the fluoridationists quoted in this article are very un-educated about current fluoride science; but are very well schooled in PR. In fact they hired SalterMitchel to help them out. But with all their money and power, I'm sure they will spread this misinformation widely. At least they could use their billion dollar trust fund to warn parents not to mix infant formula with fluoridated water since almost half of our nations' teenagers are afflicted with dental fluorosis. How about coughing up some dough to cover those splotchy teeth with veneers for the low-income people you deem to care so much about.
11/16/2011 10:01:16 AM
Truthfullness_
Yes...this is completely true.  I cured my hypothyroidism by 100% not drinking fluoridated water.  I was on thyroid medication for 10 years and after 6 mos of ceasing all ingestion of fluoridated tap water, I've been medication free for the last 3 years.
11/16/2011 12:04:44 PM
glenp
WOW!!  Now I am convinced.   Nothing better for proof  than some anecdote.
11/16/2011 12:06:30 PM
glenp
You have every right to NOT DRINK PUBLIC WATER.   There are plenty of water vendors at you local grocery store.  There is no law forcing anyone to consume government supplied aqua pura.
11/16/2011 2:30:40 PM
cty43945
Ingested fluoride in small quanities is beneficial, and like everything, when given too much is harmful to most individuals. The case over the years is how much? Everything trickles back down to HT Dean's work since it was before fluoride became indirectly ingested. What I find amazing is everyone cites his 1942 work, yet that work summarizes his C-rated data sets. I personally went through and graphed all of the A-class data, with children who were checked to have lived in the same place continuously since birth and the correlation was extremely weak (the other data set mixed the groups, including those who hadn't lived in the same place since birth, for larger numbers and because it made a near perfect correlation with Fluoride and caries). I still believe that there is a correlation between fluoride levels and caries, but it is much more complicated then what we want it to be, like anything, giving rise to the "all for" or "all against" groups. I think water should be fluoride free, since it is available indirectly from so many other sources, and if we wish to add fluoride, we should be able to find that at the supermarket and choose which fluoride salt we get to add, preferably one that has been approved by the FDA. In addition, before anybody talks, do your research and read everything before reading someone else's summary of it and taking sides.
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