General Introduction
and Foreword
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Publisher's Note:
I
prepared this book for publication following the
death of the author PHILIP R.N. SUTTON; as a result
of this there may be some minor inconsistencies, or
errors in the compilation of the glossary and index.
I decided to complete Philip's many years of work as
a token of the great affection we held for him, and
the high regard we had for his remarkable dedication
and perseverance in this field over 35 years.
Susan B. Sutton (Daughter-in-law)
FOREWORD
By Professor Albert Schatz,
Ph.D., Philadelphia, U.S.A.
(Professor Schatz discovered the
antibiotic Streptomycin which was the first
effective means of treating human tuberculosis. For
this and other research, he received honorary
degrees and medals, and was named an honorary member
of scientific, dental and medical societies in
Europe, Latin America and the United States. He was
a recipient of France's highest award for services
to humanity.)
Here's freedom to him who would read,
Here's freedom to him who would write.
There's none ever feared that the truth should be heard,
But they whom the truth would indict.
Robert Burns (1759-1796).
The importance of this book
transcends fluoridation because it is concerned with
science, values, ethics, integrity and
professionalism. The book is also concerned with
democracy; that is, with freedom of speech and a
free press. The "fluorocracy", on the other hand,
has too often engaged in censorship; opponents of
fluoridation have been denied opportunities to speak
at meetings and publish in professional journals. In
a democracy, every individual should have the
opportunity to publish what he wants, provided that
he writes with propriety, pays whatever publication
costs may be involved and assumes responsibility for
what he has printed.
The fluoridation controversy is
symptomatic of a deep-seated pathology in
present-day science. The magnitude of that malady;
that is, misconduct in research, which the public is
well aware of, motivated the U.S. Academy of
Sciences to convene a Panel on Scientific
Responsibility and the Conduct of Research.
(Responsible Science Ensuring the Integrity of the
Research Process. Vol. I, Washington D.C.1992). The
Panel's investigation, which cost $888,000,
precluded consideration of certain kinds of
scientific misconduct which specifically apply to
fluoridation. Polluted science has occurred "when
new scientific evidence threatens fluoride's
protected pollutant status. The government
immediately appoints a commission, typically
composed of several veteran fluoride defenders and
no opponents. Usually, these commissions dismiss the
new evidence and reaffirm the status quo. When one
didn't in 1983, the government simply altered the
findings." (Griffiths, J., 1992, Covert Action No,
42, page 26.)
The controversy about fluoridation
was inevitable because fluoridation was, in a real
sense, conceived in sin. Fluoride is a major waste
product of industry and one of the most devastating
pollutants of the aluminium industry. The government
has not only dismissed the danger and left industry
free to pollute, but it has promoted the intentional
addition of fluoride - most of which is recycled
industrial waste - to the nation's drinking water.
Since 1950, when fluoridation was sanctioned,
approximately 143,000 tons of fluoride are pumped
into two-thirds of the reservoirs of the U.S. each
year! (Griffiths, 1992).
One may also be interested in what I
call "the pig mentality". In 1952, a U.S.
Congressional Investigation concerned a
recommendation by the U. S . Department of
Agriculture that farmers not add to the water or
feed of pregnant pigs because the fluoride did
something to the unborn pigs. When one of the
investigating committee asked whether "it might be
wise for the U.S. Public Health Service or some
group of people to enquire what might happen to
pregnant women and the unborn child when they are
given fluoride", the answer was, "There is more
money available for matters that have economic value
than there is for health." (Schatz,A. 1976 Cancer
News Journal Vol. ll, No. 4.)
It is also important to understand how
fluoridation was originally "sold" to the public.
"The public relations strategist for the water
fluoridation campaign was none other than Sigmund
Freud's nephew, Edward L. Bernays ... known as " the
father of public relations " Bernays pioneered the
application of his uncle's theories to advertising
and government propaganda. The government's
fluoridation campaign was one of his most stunning
and enduring successes ."..."Those who manipulate
this unseen mechanism of society constitute the
invisible government which is the true ruling power
of our country - our minds are moulded, our tastes
formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we have
never heard of." (Griffiths, 1992).Now let us return to democracy to which this book on fluoridation makes a major contribution. "Knowledge will forever govern ignorance and a people who mean to be their own governors must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives." (James Madison). This book gives us that kind of knowledge about fluoridation.
According to Sir Arthur Amies, "The passion to regulate the lives of others is deep-seated in many individuals. When this is based on political expediency, it is bad, and when it is inspired by an idealism which wishes to inflict benefits on others, it can be dangerous." (Schatz, A. 1976. Increased Death Rates in Chile Associated with Artificial Fluoridation of Drinking Water, with Implications for Other Countries. Anthony University Jour. of Arts. Science and Humanities. 2: 1. Copies of this publication may be obtained from the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.) U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis expressed a similar concern as follows: "Experience should teach us to be most on our guard to protect liberty when the ... purposes are beneficial."
Philip R.N. Sutton's book presents and interprets the proverbial handwriting on the wall for fluoridation.
Philip Richard
Neville Sutton, 1914-1995
|
About The Author
PHILIP R.N.
SUTTON, D.D.Sc. (Melb) L.D.S., F.R.A.C.D.S. 1914
- 1995.
Dr
Sutton wrote his first article pointing out
errors in fluoridation trials, in the Medical
Journal of Australia, thirty-five years ago. He
continued to study and write about fluoridation,
published numerous articles and two previous
books on this subject.
In
1935, on his twenty-first birthday, he graduated
with honours from the University of Melbourne,
having completed the five-year course of the
Bachelor of Dental Science. He immediately
undertook post-graduate study and research in
Physiology and Biochemistry and established a
private practice in Brighton, Victoria which he
conducted for twenty-five years.
|
On the outbreak of war in 1939 he
enlisted in the Australian Army, serving in the
Dental Corps for a total of five years. In North
Borneo he was a member of an Australian Army medical
team which saved British and Australian servicemen
who had just been released from a small
prisoner-of-war camp where they had been dying from
starvation at the rate of six a day. Observations he
made at that time formed the basis of a thesis
submitted to the University of Melbourne which
gained him the degree of Doctor of Dental Science -
the highest dental research degree.
After the war he persuaded the
Professor of Statistics at the University of
Melbourne to establish a course, now called
Statistics for Research Workers, and, having
completed the course, joined the Statistical Society
and was later elected chairman of the Biometric
Society.
He was invited to become one of the
Foundation Fellows to form the Royal Australasian
College of Dental Surgeons. Dr Sutton was elected to
the Council of the Victorian Branch of the
Australian Dental Association (which appointed him
as its representative on the Preventive Dentistry
Committee which employed a public relations
consultant to promote fluoridation, which had just
been introduced into Australia. Therefore, because
of that association, at that time he could have been
said to be a promoter of fluoridation.
In 1956 he was appointed a Senior
Research Fellow of the University of Melbourne and
took his family for a year to Raratonga island,
South Pacific, where he provided free dental
treatment and studied tooth abnormalities in
Polynesians which resulted from their diet and habits.
Polynesians which resulted from their diet and habits.
On his return to Melbourne in 1957,
Professor Sir Arthur Amies, Dean of the Faculty of
Dental Science, asked him to check the numerical
data published from the original fluoridation trials
and the scientific methods used in them. He
discovered so many errors that to record them he was
forced to write a 72-page monograph Fluoridation:
Errors and Omissions in Experimental Trials
(Melbourne University Press, 1959). He published a
second 142-page edition in 1960 which answered the
criticisms of the first edition, showing that they
were false. This book remains scientifically
unchallenged.
In 1964 Sir Arthur Amies invited him
to become the first Senior Lecturer in Dental
Science, a position from which he resigned eleven
years later to have more time to continue his
Pacific islands studies of Polynesians and
Micronesians.
During a year's leave, in 1970-1971,
he worked in London at the Maudsley Hospital for
psychiatric patients, with the cooperation of Dr
Denis Leigh the Secretary General of the World
Psychiatric Association and Editor of the Journal of
Psychosomatic Research. The aim was to extend his
knowledge of the relation between mental stress and
acute dental caries (which he had published in
Nature in 1962; N.Y. State Dental Journal, 1965;
Advances in Oral Biology, Vol. 2, 1966, Academic
Press).
He published a second book
Fluoridation, 1979: Scientific Criticisms and
Fluoride Dangers as a 285-page submission to the
Victorian Government-sponsored Committee of Inquiry
into the Fluoridation of Victorian Water Supplies.
This led to him being flown to Edinburgh to give
evidence for several days before the inquiry into
fluoridation in the High Court.
Dr Sutton had wide-ranging research
interests and publications apart from fluoridation,
such as his series of papers on the relation between
mental stress and dental decay, the initial article
being his first publication in Nature. He became a
regular contributor to the "ideas" scientific
journal Medical Hypotheses, which has published all
the eleven papers he has submitted.
Philip Sutton was internationally
respected as a dentist and medical researcher and a
great gentleman.
Almost without exception, Philip
Sutton is mentioned in the references of world
publications on fluoridation.
Philip Sutton was noted as a strong
fluoridation critic, but never once stooped to
personalities because of his strong conviction that
honest science is where debate should be confined.
Philip, as he was affectionately
known around Australia, was always available for
discussions and advice on fluoridation and practical
help in dentistry.
Philip Sutton published the first
warning about fluoridation deceptive claims made
about the first experimental fluoridation plants.
His book Fluoridation: Errors and Omissions in
Experimental Trials, published 1959 is only now
acknowledged by the fluoridation hierarchy as
correct, even though throughout the years since he
published his research, the Health Departments of
the U.S.A. and government employed dentists
throughout the world aggressively attacked his
printed data.
It is now documented in the
Australian Government National Health and Medical
Research Council 1991 Study into Fluoridation that:
"...The quality of the early intervention trials was generally poor."
So it took over 30 years before
Philip Sutton's research data was acknowledged as
correct by the Australian Government and other
international organisations.
It would be difficult to find a more
academically qualified and practical dental doctor
with qualifications that set him above the so-called
"experts" foolish enough to criticise his work.
Philip Sutton gave evidence at
fluoridation enquiries around Australia, he also
attended public meetings, often speaking on
fluoridation. He always answered the questions that
usually came fast and furiously.
The world has lost a great
scientist, but he left a standard of quality
research in his publications (including articles
published in most countries of the world), and in
his books, suggesting a standard that should
continue to form the basis of proper debate on
fluoridation.
To the end of his life Dr Sutton was
a seeker of truth. Unfortunately he did not live to
see this his final work published as he died on 12th
March 1995.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The family of Dr Sutton wish to
particularly thank Mr Glen S.R. Walker for the
support and great friendship he gave to their father
during his lifetime. They wish also to acknowledge
the invaluable hours of learned advice and
assistance he so willingly gave to them in preparing
this book for publication.
Introductory comments
Before the first edition of that
monograph ["Fluoridation: Errors and Omissions in
Experimental Trials"] was published in 1959, as a
matter of courtesy a copy of the final draft was
sent, for his information, to the Federal President
of the Australian Dental Association, Dr (later Sir
Kenneth) Adamson - who was well known to me.
At Dr Adamson's request, the
monograph was discussed with him for several hours
in the presence of a friend of his, a consultant
physician with extensive knowledge of academic
statistics, who, to Dr Adamson's obvious surprise,
did not make any criticism. This was not unexpected,
for during its preparation it had been most
carefully checked by Professor Maurice Betz, the
head of the Department of Mathematical Statistics in
the University of Melbourne.
Of course, the results published in
the monograph threw considerable doubt on the
pro-fluoridation stance which had been adopted by
the executive of the Australian Dental Association.
Therefore, having failed to find any errors in the
monograph himself, Dr Adamson sought criticisms from
others by sending copies of this final draft to a
number of fluoridation "experts", including the
authors of the five studies which were discussed in
the monograph. Some of their replies to Dr Adamson
were later published in the February, 1960, issue of
the Australian Dental Journal as "Book Reviews".
However, none of the published Criticisms were
written by authors of the Grand Rapids and Newburgh
studies. Upon inquiry, the Australian Dental Journal
said that replies had been received from authors of
those two studies, but that the language of their
replies, particularly that of Dr David Ast of the
Newburgh trial, was so immoderate that it had been
considered unwise to publish their comments.
These criticisms of the monograph
were backed up by an editorial in that issue which
mentioned Part One of the first edition, which had
been reprinted from an article by the present
author, with Professor Sir Arthur Amies, in the
Medical Journal of Australia, I February, 1958(a).
That editorial in the Australian Dental Journal
(1960) stated:
"It is important, however, not to be stampeded by this criticism [in the monograph] since to be of value it must have the hall-mark of informed authority."
That dental editor was so biased
towards fluoridation that he was prepared to brush
aside the fact that Part One of the monograph, that
article in the Medical Journal of Australia, had as
co-author the "informed authority", Professor Sir
Arthur Amies, Dean of the Faculty of Dental Science,
University of Melbourne, who had closely studied
fluoridation since its inception, and who had
carefully considered the material in Part Two before
it was published.
The editor of the Australian Dental
Journal contended that this article (Sutton and
Amies, 1958a) contained a "fundamental error", in
that it stated that proposals to fluoridate domestic
water supplies are almost entirely based on the
results of the Brantford, Grand Rapids, Newburgh and
Evanston projects. He claimed that the scientific
basis of fluoridation was established firmly before
those trials. However, he could not have read the
reports of those four trials in which all the
authors stated that their trials were set up to test
the fluoridation hypothesis. For instance, the
authors of the Grand Rapids study (Dean et al.
1950) stated:
"... in 1945, three studies to determine the caries prophylactic value of artificially fluoridated drinking water were started in the United States and Canada."
There would have been little point
in establishing these long-term trials (planned to
last for ten years) if the editor of the Australian
Dental Journal had been correct, and the scientific
basis of fluoridation had been established firmly
prior to these trials.
Sadly, as the evidence against
fluoridation has mounted over the years, the
executive officers of the Australian Dental
Association, instead of reassessing their stance,
have become more and more dogmatic in their
statements regarding this process. This attitude has
jeopardized the status of dentistry as a scientific
discipline which maintains an open mind, so that
opinions can be modified as new scientific facts
emerge which show that the views held are no longer
tenable.
It should be known that there is no
evidence that the great mass of dentists in private
practice have studied fluoridation data. As in the
case of most scientific matters, which they have
neither the time nor the specialized training to
investigate, their opinions are based on those
expressed by the executive officers of the
Association who, they assume, provide them with a
well informed and honest appraisal of scientific
subjects. Unfortunately that assumption, in the case
of fluoridation, is not justified.
The same situation occurs in other
countries. The President of the International
Society for Research on Nutrition and Vital
Substances, Professor H.A. Schweigart, pointed out
in 1967 that the German organization of dentists had
requested the fluoridation of drinking-water on
behalf of its 35,000 members, but that most of the
members were not consulted. He stated:
"The fluoridation of drinking-water releases a fluorine circuit which includes vegetables, fruit and other horticultural products as well as milk, and has an uncontrollable effect on the human organism."
At least some executive officers of
the A.D.A. have promoted fluoridation for many
years, saying that it is efficacious and absolutely
safe. It seems they are now so afraid of losing
"face" that they are prepared to make false
statements and to mislead even their own members
about this medication. Such an incident occurred in
an anonymous newsletter distributed to all the
members of the Australian Dental Association in
1989. This bulletin was entitled "Disaster in
Canberra". No mention was made of the dental effects
of this "disaster" - the cessation of fluoridation
in Canberra by order of the A.C.T. Legislative
Assembly. The "disaster" seems to be the fact that
that decision was contrary to the policy of the
executive officers, and to the advice they had given
during "... a vigorous lobbying campaign to inform
members of the Assembly of the Association's views
on fluoridation" and, therefore, was damaging to
their prestige and image. The newsletter said that
another study which purported to reach the same
conclusion as Dr Diesendorf's [which the newsletter
criticized] was by Colquhoun in New Zealand. The
newsletter stated:
"When the data was re-examined for previous fluoride exposure by the N.Z. Medical Research Council Colquhoun's "findings" evaporated."
This statement in the ADA News
Bulletin is false. The Director of the Medical
Research Council of New Zealand stated in a letter,
dated 8 January, 1990, to Dr John Colquhoun, that:
"... this Council has not at any stage set out to re-analyse your research data, nor has it contracted others to do so."
In reply to a request by the present
author for a copy of their "analysis" cited by the
Executive of the A.D.A., the Administrative Officer
of the New Zealand Medical Research Council, in a
letter dated 7 February, 1990, stated (in part):
"Neither this Council nor any of its research Units or investigators have produced a paper on this work [by Dr Colquhoun] nor am I aware of the possible source of this information."
These two letters show that the
statement by the Executive of the A.D.A. is not
true.
A similar statement to that in the
ADA News Bulletin was incorporated into a long
(10-page) misleading letter to members of the ACT
Legislative Assembly and was a factor in tricking
some of them into reversing their vote and restoring
fluoridation to Canberra, without waiting for the
finding of a five-member Parliamentary Committee
which the Assembly had set up to investigate this
matter. The report of this committee was published
in February 1991 (See Appendix II).
The concept of fluoridation arose
from the results reported from "naturally
fluoridated" areas of the U.S.A., during
investigations into the cause of the unsightly
condition then called "mottling" of the teeth
("dental fluorosis"). The main investigator was Dr
Trendley Dean (1934), who became known as "the
Father of Fluoridation".
In 1983, Dr Rudolph Ziegelbecker, of
the Institute of Environmental Research, Graz,
Austria, commented on these studies. One of them
showed that with a fluoride concentration of 0.5 ppm
in Wisconsin the DMF rate per 100 children aged
12-14 years, was 710 - twice that of the DMF rate
(342) in children of the same age in Colorado, where
the fluoride concentration in the drinking-water was
also 0.5 ppm. He found that:
"The calculation shows that in Wisconsin, fluoride in the range from 0.12 to 0.5 ppm was not correlated with caries incidence", and he stated that "This study by Dean, used by the respondents [in a High Court case in Edinburgh] to support the hypothesis that fluoride reduces the caries incidence, is clearly unsound in its premises and conclusions and gives no one evidence that fluoride reduces caries incidence."
Ziegelbecker also considered the
famous diagram showing the dental caries / fluoride
relationship in 21 cities in the U.S.A. This was
prepared by Dean, Arnold and Elvove in 1942 and was
published in many text-books, having a marked
influence in promoting the idea that the prevalence
of dental caries was inversely related to the
fluoride content of drinking-water.
Ziegelbecker (1983) stated that this
chart of the "inverse relationship" between fluoride
ingestion and dental caries prevalence was based on:
"... an inexcusable illicit selection of data"
because dental surveys from more
than 650 counties and cities were known to Dean, but
that he had:
"...selected 21 cities in such a manner that the result supported the thesis of the "inverse relationship" between the natural fluoride content of the common water supply and the caries incidence in children."
(More than forty years after its
publication this false diagram was still used, being
tendered in evidence in 1981 by the pro-fluoridation
respondents in that High Court case in Edinburgh,
who stated that it was a careful and important
study.)
Contrary to the contention of the
editor of the Australian Dental Journal, there is no
doubt that the early results reported from the Grand
Rapids trial brought about the endorsement of
fluoridation by the U.S. Public Health Service in
1950 (Lohr and Love, 1954), and undoubtedly formed
the basis of later proposals to fluoridate
drinking-water.
The editor of the Australian Dental
Journal did not make further comments on that paper
(Sutton and Amies, 1958a) after Associate-Professor
Noel Martin, the main advocate of fluoridation in
Australia, had failed, in two long letters to the
Medical Journal of Australia on 22 February and 14
June 1958 (Martin, 1958a, 1958b) to point out any
errors in the paper.
In a reply to Martin's letters it
was noted (Sutton and Amies, 1958b) that:
"Despite the fact that the length of his [Martin's] criticisms considerably exceeded that of the paper, he did not indicate even one error in the statements made in demonstrating that there are disturbing features in the published reports of fluoridation trials."
The same Associate-Professor Martin
was appointed on 12 November, 1959 by the Dental
Advisory Committee of the National Health and
Medical Research Council of Australia to be the
chairman of a committee of three - the other two
members were professors of statistics - to
investigate the contents of the monograph
Fluoridation Errors and Omissions in Experimental
Trials. Apparently, even with their expert
assistance, he was not able to criticize the book
and hoped that the matter would be forgotten, for
more than three years later his report had not been
submitted. However, this was noticed, and he was
then instructed (25 March, 1963) to present it at
the next meeting of that Committee of the NH&MRC. He
did so, but his report was not released.
After the passing of the Freedom of
Information Act, under the provisions of that Act,
the chairman of the Anti-Fluoridation Association of
Victoria sought for two years to see that report by
Associate-Professor Martin. When the report was not
forthcoming the matter was taken to the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal (in effect, a court)
in July 1985, the respondent being the Secretary of
the Commonwealth Health Department. After a lengthy
case in the Tribunal it was announced that although
the other records of the NH&MRC were available,
Associate-Professor Martin's report could not be
found, and that no further search would be
undertaken by the government to locate this official
report by Martin and his committee.
(There is no doubt that this report
existed at one time for Sir Arthur Amies, who was
then a member of the Dental Advisory Committee of
the NH&MRC, told the present author that he had read
it, but that it was merely fluoridation propaganda
and had not provided any valid criticism of the
monograph. Presumably it had been removed from the
NH&MRC files and destroyed.)
Soon after the first edition of the
monograph was published, the stored printer's type
at the Melbourne University Press (which was usually
held for at least six months) was melted down
without authority by an unknown person, thus almost
preventing the publication of a second edition.
However, the type was re-set, at considerable
expense...
There are accounts of similar
attempts being made in other countries to prevent
the publication of books which criticize
fluoridation. One well-known case was the book The
Toxicology of Fluoride, edited by Professor T.
Gordonoff. According to Professor Albert Schatz
(1965), one publishing house set the type:
"But it was then warned that if it went ahead and published this particular book the dental community would stop patronizing it. In the face of this threatened economic boycott and enticed by an offer of compensation to cover all expenses incurred (approximately 10,000 Swiss franks), the publisher "dropped" the book."
"But it was then warned that if it went ahead and published this particular book the dental community would stop patronizing it. In the face of this threatened economic boycott and enticed by an offer of compensation to cover all expenses incurred (approximately 10,000 Swiss franks), the publisher "dropped" the book."
It was published two years later by
Schwab & Co.
As Schatz said in 1965:
"There are powerful forces which now have a vested interest in perpetuating fluoridation because their reputations depend on its continuation."
Suppression of discussion
regarding fluoridation
The same vested interests are
promoting fluoridation today, in the 1990's using
similar techniques to prevent the spread of the
knowledge that fluoridation has failed: The
repression and abuse of opponents of this process
and the suppression of published evidence against
it, and making it difficult to publish new material
which those interests consider even questions
fluoridation.
This discouragement of the
discussion on fluoridation is still pursued very
actively. The U.S. Public Health Service (U.S.PH.S.)
- now the Department of Health and Welfare -
distributes enormous funds to its many agencies. It
also finances many research grants, both in the
U.S.A. and in other countries. This control of
grants has a restricting effect on the scientific
discussion of fluoridation, for since 1950 it has
been a process strongly promoted by the U.S.PH.S.
American professors have admitted that they have to
think of their grants and, therefore, avoid the
subject of fluoridation. This is understandable for,
apart from the financial aspects, if they questioned
fluoridation there would be a distinct possibility
that they would be added to those who are abused and
whose personal reputations are attacked.
The refusal to consider any material
which questions fluoridation is well illustrated by
the experience of Professor Albert Schatz. In 1976
he published reproductions of photostat copies of
three envelopes he had used in 1965, each containing
the same short article about increased death rates
associated with fluoridation in Chile. He had
written previously to L.C. Henderson, the editor of
the Journal of the American Dental Association about
this paper but had not received a reply. The
photographs show that the editor had refused to
accept each of the three envelopes, in succession,
and that they had therefore been returned, unopened,
to Professor Schatz (his name was on the outside of
each envelope).
In 1961, the American Dental
Association's Bureau of Public Information, in a
re-issue of a publication entitled Comments on the
O12Donents of Fluoridation, grouped several
reputable scientists with alleged members of the
John Birch Society, the Ku Klux Klan, an escapee
from a hospital for mental patients, and others, in
an obvious attempt to injure their reputations by
"damning by association." That dossier condemned the
300 members of the Medical-Dental Committee on the
Evaluation of Fluoridation, solely because they were
such a small proportion of the 300,000 physicians
and dentists in the U.S.A.
Mr Ralph Nader, the consumer
advocate, said in 1971:
"... you just don't expect to be treated well by H.E.W. [a branch of the U.S.PH.S.] in its massive research granting if you come out against this kind of thing [fluoridation]. It's a matter of professional intimidation here."
In 1988 Bette Hileman, an associate
editor of Chemical & Engineering News, stated that
John S. Small, information specialist at the U.S.
National Institute of Dental Research, had admitted
that he keeps files on anti-fluoridation
organizations and their leaders, and she said that
Ralph Nader had branded such activities as an
"institutionalized witch-hunt".
An attempt was made to prevent the
distribution of the monograph Fluoridation: Errors
and Omissions in Experimental Trials (Sutton, 1959)
in the U.S.A. by, amongst others, the Nutrition
Foundation Inc., which wrote to the distributors,
Cambridge University Press, New York, on 20 January,
1960, declaring that:
"The professional standing of the Cambridge University Press among scientists and educators would seem to preclude publication of such a book by Cambridge University Press."
In his reply (25 Jan., 1960) the
manager of the Cambridge University Press said;
"... if you find inaccuracies in Dr Sutton's book, we should be most grateful if you will point them out to enable us to make changes in any future printing."
He did not receive a reply to his
letter.
When this attempt to suppress the
monograph failed, the Journal of the American Dental
Association published an extensive criticism of it.
That influential journal, in July 1960, devoted a
three-page editorial to attacking the monograph. It
stated:
"Last year the Melbourne University Press of Australia published an 83 page booklet by Mr P.R.N. Sutton entitled Fluoridation Errors and Omissions in Experimental Trials. It is now being circulated to a limited extent in the United States.The following review prepared by J. Ferris Fuller for the New Zealand Dental Journal is herewith republished in full as it skillfully points out many of the errors and omissions in reporting which Mr P.R.N. Sutton has less skilfully employed in compiling his observations on the errors and omissions in fluoridation."
By twice incorrectly using the term
"Mr ", the editor of the J.A.D.A. conveyed to
readers, particularly to American ones, that the
author of the monograph was a layman, for all
dentists and medical practitioners in America are
given the title of "Dr" If the editor of J.A.D.A.
had read even the title page of the monograph he
must have known that the author had received the
postgraduate degree of Doctor of Dental Science from
the University of Melbourne. Therefore it appears
that this "mistake" was made deliberately to deceive
his readers.
Then followed the criticism by J.
Ferris Fuller shown on pages 327 to 330.
However, the editor of the Journal
of the American Dental Association was so keen to
denigrate the monograph that he failed to check the
claims made in the "book review" which he
re-published. Apparently he did not realize that the
criticism by Colonel Fuller, although superficially
"skillful", was based on misquotations - that this
critic condemned statements which the author of the
monograph had not made, nor did he realize that
Colonel Fuller had concocted many false and
misleading comments of his own.
The most important publication which
enables a reader to locate articles and books on
dental subjects is the annual Index to Dental
Literature published by the American Dental
Association. This lists not only all articles and
letters, but also all books and pamphlets published
during the year, and has the reputation for being a
comprehensive list. The Indexes for the years 1960
and 196 1, which should have listed the first and
second editions of the monograph did not do so, nor
did they mention the favourable reviews.
However, they indexed the
unfavourable ones, so that these omissions were
obviously made intentionally by staff of the
American Dental Association to suppress this
criticism of fluoridation trials, which were the
foundation for the endorsement of this process by
that Association.
The following pages are a reprint of
the second edition of that monograph: Fluoridation:
Errors and Omissions in Experimental Trials, 1960,
Melbourne University Press, which has been out of
print for many years.
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