January 10, 2019
Yesterday Water Fluoridation received three major body blows. The first was political; the second was professional and the third was scientific.
1. The political body blow: Children's health Defense Calls for End to Fluoridation
Robert
F. Kennedy Jr.’s nonprofit team published a must-read article yesterday
condemning artificial water fluoridation as "A Forced Experiment That Needs to End." While the Children's Health Defense is primarily devoted to reducing exposure to mercury, part of its mission is to demand scientific integrity and expose public health policies that are harming children. Click below to read the article:
Here is a
link to the media release that FAN put out today on this major development. Please forward this media release to your local media outlets.
2. Professional body blow: A popular dental blog questions the need for fluoride in dentistry.
While
the American Dental Association and the American Fluoridation Society
claim there is an absolute consensus amongst dentists that fluoride and
fluoridation are "safe and effective,"
we know this to be a myth. Hundreds of dentists have signed FAN's
professional statement calling for an end to fluoridation, and a week
doesn't go by without another dentist somewhere publicly questioning the
safety and benefits of the practice. In fact,
I doubt the ADA has ever anonymously polled its own membership on their
support for fluoridation out of fear of what might result.
This week, Dr. Mark Burhenne, DDS of Sunnyvale, California published a fairly comprehensive and well-researched article on his popular dental blog weighing the pros and cons of using both topical and non-topical fluoride, along with available alternatives.
In this major article, entitled “Ask the Dentist: Is Fluoride Safe?” he calls fluoride "a known toxin" that "most people don't truly need...especially when its ingested via the water supply," and concludes that "with safer alternatives available, it's just not worth the risk."
This week, Dr. Mark Burhenne, DDS of Sunnyvale, California published a fairly comprehensive and well-researched article on his popular dental blog weighing the pros and cons of using both topical and non-topical fluoride, along with available alternatives.
In this major article, entitled “Ask the Dentist: Is Fluoride Safe?” he calls fluoride "a known toxin" that "most people don't truly need...especially when its ingested via the water supply," and concludes that "with safer alternatives available, it's just not worth the risk."
3. The
Scientific body blow.
One of the world’s leading neuroscientists reviews the neurotoxicity of fluoride and cities the latest US government-funded
studies by Bashash et al, 2017 and 2018.
Dr. David Bellinger is one of the world’s leading neuroscientists. He is recognized as the leading authority on lead’s neurotoxicity. This week in the important journal Pediatric Medicine he published a review (Environmental chemical exposures and neurodevelopmental impairments in children) of the chemicals known to, or suspected, of damaging the child’s developing brain. He included fluoride in that list. In his introduction he wrote:
The
central nervous system (CNS) is especially vulnerable to perturbation
by environmental chemicals. Six of the 10 chemicals on the WHO’s
list of chemicals of greatest public health concern adversely affect
the brain (air pollution, arsenic, dioxin- and dioxin-like compounds,
lead, mercury, and pesticides), with some evidence suggesting that two
of the remaining four might do so as well (cadmium,
fluoride) (http://www.who.int/ipcs/assessment/public_ health/chemicals_phc/en/). (our emphasis)
In
the section devoted to fluoride he cities the Chinese IQ studies and
the US government-funded studies by Bashash et al., 2017, 2018.
A
review of nearly three dozen studies conducted in China, mostly
ecologic in design and comparing children from a low-exposure village
to a high-exposure village, concluded that exposure to water with
greater fluoride concentrations is associated with lower IQ scores (66).
Such studies provide only weak evidence, however, lacking data on
internal exposures (i.e., blood concentrations of fluoride
in individual participants or severity of dental fluorosis). Also the
villages compared likely differed not only in water fluoride
concentrations, but in also in terms of other factors that might affect
the distributions of their IQ scores (e.g., socioeconomic
status, access to medical care, quality of schools, etc.). Recently,
studies that address these limitations have been reported. In a
relatively small pilot study in China, negative associations were found
between fluorosis severity, reflecting lifetime exposure,
and children’s scores on some neuropsychological tests (67). Similar
findings were reported in India (68), while in a Mexican study,
children’s prenatal fluoride exposure (concentration in maternal urine
during pregnancy) were inversely associated with IQ
scores at ages 4 and 6–12 years (69). Increased exposure to fluoride
has also been linked, ecologically, to ADHD prevalence in the U.S. (70)
and, in a cohort study, to increased ADHD symptoms in Mexican children
(71).
66. Choi AL, Sun G, Zhang Y, et al. Developmental neurotoxicity of fluoride: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Environ Health Perspect 2012;120:1362-8.
67. Choi AL, Zhang Y, Sun G, et al. Association of lifetime exposure to fluoride and cognitive functions in Chinese
children: a pilot study. Neurotoxicol Teratol 80. 2015;47:96-101.
68. Khan SA, Singh RK, Navit S, et al. Relationship between dental fluorosis and intelligence quotient of school going
children in and around Lucknow district: a cross-sectional study. J Clin Diagn Res 2015;9:ZC10-5.
69. Bashash M, Thomas D, Hu H, et al. Prenatal fluoride exposure and cognitive outcomes in children at 4 and 6-12 years
of age in Mexico. Environ Health Perspect 2017;125:097017. 82.
70. Malin AJ, Till C. Exposure to fluoridated water and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) prevalence
among children and adolescents in the United States: an ecological association. Environ Health 2015;14:17.
71. Bashash M, Marchand M, Hu H, et al. Prenatal fluoride exposure and attention de cit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD.
symptoms in children at 6-12 years of age in Mexico City. Environ Int 2018;121:658-66.
According
to FAN’s director, Paul Connett, “What we have here is yet another
leading neuroscientist acknowledging what government authorities and the
media
in countries which practice fluoridation are trying so hard to ignore
or downplay, namely that fluoride – at doses experienced in fluoridated
communities - has the potential to lower the intelligence of our
children.”
Thank you,
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