Belchertown Bulletin October 2017
Mexico study: Prenatal fluoride exposure reduces
children’s intelligence
A
study of nearly 300 mother-child pairs in Mexico has found that children born
to mothers with higher levels of fluoride in their urine during pregnancy
suffered greater loss of intelligence as measured by intelligence test scores.
The
authors emphasized that the level of fluoride that caused the neurotoxic effect
is not high, and is found in the broader public.
In
their paper, published in the September issue of Environmental Health
Perspectives, the authors write, “higher levels of maternal urinary fluoride
during pregnancy (a proxy for prenatal fluoride
exposure) that are in the range of levels of exposure in other general population
samples of pregnant women as well as nonpregnant adults were associated with
lower scores on tests of cognitive function in the offspring
at 4 and 6–12 y old.”
The
authors’ failed to note that several previous studies found a neurotoxic effect
from fluoride levels in water below the level the US Environmental Protection
Agency says is safe.
Most
of the authors of the report are based at researcher centers in Canada and the
USA. While the article discusses the regulation of toxins in water in the USA,
it says nothing about the control of such chemicals in Mexico, where fluoride
is not added to the drinking water.
Coverage of this story can be found at the CNN and Newsweek websites.
Public Health researchers “sell” their goals to the
public
Most public health
researchers focus their advocacy on the need to “sell” their goals to
politicians and the public rather than facilitate public understanding and
participation in public health matters, according to a new study in Social
Science and Medicine.
The
authors of the report, K.E. Smith and E.A. Stuart of the University of
Edinburgh, interviewed 147 health professionals, asking them, “What role, if
any do professionals concerned with public health feel researchers ought to
play in advocacy?”
They
concluded, “Two deeply contrasting conceptualizations of ‘advocacy’ exist
within public health, the most dominant of which centers on strategies for
‘selling’ public health goals to decision-makers and the wider public. This
contrasts with an alternative (less widely employed) conceptualization of
advocacy as ‘facilitational’. This approach focuses on working with communities
whose voices are often unheard/ignored in policy to enable their views to
contribute to debates.”
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