December 5, 2016
There
is no doubt that our fantastic FAN supporters like a challenge -
especially challenges that promise to double their donations.
By Sunday evening we had raised $15,136 from 63 donors. This response has so impressed our super-angel that he has increased his challenge. All donations over the next two days will be doubled until we have reached $21,000.
To add further excitement and fun to the proceedings a second super-angel has focused on reaching our other goal of getting 1000 donors -he will donate $1000 for each 100 donors we get up to 500, then $2000 for each 100 donors up to 900 and then a whopping $7,000 if and when we get to 1000 donors!
More good news! Chelsea Green has donated 10 of our books to support this fundraiser. So we will be sending signed copies of these to donors, #100, #200, #300...#1000.
We
still have to be vigilant to make sure that those determined to protect
the fluoridation program don’t skewer the results. For example, it is
worrying that the NTP specified that an animal study should be conducted
at 0.7 ppm - which is a ridiculous provision for an animal study on
fluoride. For example, it is well known that rats need a much higher
dose of fluoride in their water to reach the same plasma levels in
humans. Moreover, it is standard practice in toxicology to use much
higher doses in animals order to tease out effects. To conduct
experiments on animals at expected human doses would require a huge
number of animals, which would be cost prohibitive.
Fundraising TeamTo add further excitement and fun to the proceedings a second super-angel has focused on reaching our other goal of getting 1000 donors -he will donate $1000 for each 100 donors we get up to 500, then $2000 for each 100 donors up to 900 and then a whopping $7,000 if and when we get to 1000 donors!
More good news! Chelsea Green has donated 10 of our books to support this fundraiser. So we will be sending signed copies of these to donors, #100, #200, #300...#1000.
So
supporters at any donation level can be part of an effort that could
raise another $20,000. To put this into perspective the highest number
we have ever had was 802 in 2014.
We
cannot overstate the importance of the number of donors we reach. This
number is what foundations look at when assessing which groups are
worthy of their support. So all donations are important to our cause of
ending fluoridation - both large and small your donation can male a
difference to our efforts.
To
make a tax-deductible donation to the Fluoride Action Network, a
project of the American Environmental Health Studies Project, you can
either:
- Donate online using our secure server. If you should experience difficulty in donating at our secure server, please call Network For Good at 1-888-284-7978 and press option 3 to make your donation over the phone.
- Or by check – please make checks payable to Fluoride Action Network and send to: FAN, c/o Connett, 104 Walnut Street, Binghamton NY 13905
Ask FAN Anything
This Saturday, December 10, at 5pm (eastern time) please join the Fluoride Action Network staff and team for this month’s International Fluoride Free Teleconference.
The call is free and will provide a year-in-review of the fluoride
issue, as well as provide an opportunity for supporters to ask the FAN
team questions. So please plan on joining us for this opportunity to
interact with fellow campaigners from around the world and have your
questions about fluoride and the Fluoride Action Network answered by the
experts.
Ongoing Neurotoxicity Studies
FAN's
relentless effort to get the U.S. government to take fluoride's
neurotoxicity seriously is beginning to pay off. Hitherto, for many
years, American regulatory and research agencies have failed to finance
studies seeking to reproduce the many studies undertaken abroad that
have found harm to the brain (over 300) but that is changing:
1. There is a new National Institute of Health funded fluoride/brain study. Our Canadian friends are extremely excited by this research funding to Christine Till and Ashley Malin, the co-authors of the important study that found a correlation between fluoridation and increased ADHD rates in the U.S. This is what Robert Flemingof
the national group Canadians Opposed to Fluoridation (COF-COF)
wrote: “This is possibly the most important recently evolving
development in water fluoridation to date.”
2. A
new rodent study that the National Toxicology Program (NTP) is in the
process of completing using low levels of fluoride exposure. We have
concerns over the consultation process that NTP had prior to when this
study was undertaken, see “Vigilance Still Needed” at end of bulletin.
3. Dr.
Jaqueline Calderón Hernandez, from Universidad Autónoma de San Luis
Potosí in Mexico is currently working with Dr. Diana Rocha-Amador on
three U.S. government funded studies by the National Institute of
Environmental Health Studies (NIEHS) on fluoride neurotoxicity: (1) an
examination of the cognitive effects from fluoride in drinking water,
(2) estimating the global burden of disease of mild mental retardation
associated with environmental fluoride exposure, and (3) investigating
the impact of in utero exposure to fluoride (via drinking water) on
cognitive development delay in children. Dr. Diana Rocha-Amador is also
examining the impact of fluoride on thyroid hormone levels in pregnant
women. She also published a fluoride/IQ study in 2007.
4.
Dr. Philippe Grandjean (Harvard School of Public Health) is leading an
ongoing study of fluoride and intelligence among a group of
schoolchildren in China. Grandjean published the preliminary results of this study in the January-February 2015 issue of Neurotoxicology & Teratology. (Choi 2015).
5.
An NIEHS-funded human epidemiological study titled “Prenatal and
Childhood Exposure to Fluoride and Neurodevelopment,” is investigating
the relationship between fluoride and IQ among a cohort of children in
Mexico. A summary of the study is available online.
6.
An NIEHS-funded animal study, titled “Effects of Fluoride on Behavior
in Genetically Diverse Mouse Models,” is investigating fluoride’s
effects on behavior and whether these effects differ based on the
genetic strain of the mouse. The principal investigator of the study is
Pamela Den Besten. A summary of her study is available online.
7.
The NIH is funding a study investigating the impact of fluoride on the
timing of puberty among children in Mexico. This study is pertinent to
the assessment of fluoride’s impact on the pineal gland’s regulation of
melatonin. The preliminary results of the study were presented at the
2014 ISEE conference and can be accessed online.
Historical footnote:
When
Phyllis Mullenix et al published their groundbreaking animal study on
fluoride and animal behavior in 1995, she was fired from her position as
chair of the toxicology department at the Forsythe dental center. That
sent a chilling message to US researchers - research on fluoride
toxicity is a "no go area." Now with the U.S. government funding several
important studies this should encourage other Western researchers to
get involved.
Vigilance still needed
Fluoride Action Network
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