March 8, 2019
This afternoon, the Fluoride Action Network released the following press release, which we strongly urge you to share with your local media outlets. Please email the PR Newswire version of our release to the news editors of the largest outlets in your community. Please also share far and wide on social media.
Fluoride Overfeed Incident Needs Health Investigation
In
response to a fluoride overfeed in Sandy City, Utah, where drinking
water fluoride reached
levels
that caused nausea, vomiting and other fluoride poisoning
symptoms in residents, the Fluoride Action Network (FAN) has sent a letter to
the mayor and other public officials asking for a detailed health
investigation. The fluoride incident on February 5-7 reportedly caused
levels at homes to reach over 100 mg/L, a level close to what caused a
fatality and serious illnesses in a previous overfeed
accident in Alaska. A level of 100 mg/L is 25 times greater than the
EPA standard and 150 times greater than the normal level for water
fluoridation.
FAN
points out that government officials downplayed possible health
effects. Officials said
fluoride does not accumulate in the body and therefore should cause no
long-term effects. This is incorrect, as 50% of ingested fluoride is
retained and can raise the body-burden for years. The health
investigation that followed the Alaska fluoride poisoning
incident found elevated fluoride and the Alaska fluoride and abnormal
clinical blood measures weeks after the exposures had ceased.
The
fluoridating chemical released in Sandy, hydrofluorosilicic acid,
apparently caused
the corrosiveness of the water to increase dramatically, causing
leaching of unsafe levels of lead, copper, and other heavy metals from
plumbing. A public health official claimed neurotoxic harm from lead
only occurs as the last stage of poisoning. Actually,
in children, neurotoxicity occurs at levels below where symptoms of
lead poisoning appear.
FAN requests that a thorough health investigation be conducted, similar to
that for the Alaska incident, with added attention to lead and other heavy metals.
Paul Connett, PhD, director of FAN, said, "Contrary to claims by some officials,
this accident is not such a rare event. Dozens of other fluoride
accidents have been reported. Unfortunately, most officials do not find out how toxic fluoride is until accidents
like this occur."
"The only positive outcome from such incidents is the spotlight they shine on health risks from water fluoridation. Growing scientific evidence now shows that pregnant women consuming fluoridated water at the normal level of 0.7 mg/L may be lowering the IQ of their children. Alternatives to fluoridation, such as now used in Scotland, can reduce cavities just as much without imposing the risks of dosing everyone's water with fluoride and risking accidents like this."
No comments:
Post a Comment