The dental-lobby, along with proponents of fluoridation on the Calgary City Council, worked to
pass a resolution in February directing the University of Calgary’s
O’Brien Institute for Public Health to conduct a review of fluoridation
and present their findings to the council on July 24th. However, their strategy fell apart this weekend
after the O’Brien
Institute published their report,
in part highlighting
the neurotoxic risk posed to the fetus by fluoride. Yesterday, the City Council voted 13-1 to cancel O’Brien’s Wednesday presentation.
Section Two of the O'Brien report deals with the potential harms of fluoridation, with a portion dedicated to neurotoxicity, including discussion of some of the more recent studies. They point to the 2017 Bashash Mother-Offspring study that found that certain levels of fluoride in a pregnant woman's urine will lower the child’s IQ. They also commented on a second study from Bashash et al. 2018, which found that higher urinary fluoride levels during pregnancy was associated with attention hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms in children at 6-12 years of age.
But maybe more important than these acknowledgements, they point out that criticism from the pro-fluoridation lobby of these two studies was baseless and inaccurate:
No reasonable parent would trade less than one cavity saved for a lifetime of cognitive impairment for their child. We can easily fix a cavity, but we cannot fix damage done to the brain.
We suspect that several factors may have contributed to the O’Brien report providing an honest assessment of the neurotoxicity data.
Safe Water Calgary, along with members of the Fluoride Action Network and a team of international health and scientific experts, generated a Statement in Opposition to Artificial Water Fluoridation responding to CADTH’s claims, sharing it with councilors, the O’Brien Institute, and local media.
In response to O’Brien’s report, Canada’s top dental researcher and fluoride expert Dr. Hardy Limeback, has been tweeting his analysis of the O'Brien report to Calgary Council, which our friends at Fluoride Free Peel have compiled on their site. It’s also definitely worth a look.
Fluoride Free New Zealand issued an excellent press release on the O'Brien Institute's report, particularly as it excerpted many of their statements in the report.
Cancellation of Presentation and Public Hearing
To make matters worse for proponents of fluoridation, the city council voted 13-1 yesterday to cancel O’Brien’s Wednesday presentation and the ensuing public hearing. Councilors suggested they reschedule the hearing this fall, after the budget is resolved. Calgary is currently facing a severe budget crisis that will require councilors to cut $60 million dollars in spending this week, some of which will come out of fire and police budgets. The City's Administration further torpedoed plans to initiate fluoridation in their recommendation to council, stating:
We expect that the dental associations and American Fluoridation Society will attempt to lobby behind the scenes to amend the O’Brien report and re-ignite the debate this fall. However, Safe Water Calgary and FAN will build upon our momentum to ensure the public won't forget the harm posed by fluoridation, no matter how much time some councilors give proponents to re-group or work to revise history.
Please stay tuned, as we plan to provide additional coverage of the fluoridation battle in Calgary, including a bulletin taking an in-depth view of our response to the CADTH review, as well as a new video that includes news of how the fluoridation-lobby is actively working to silence Calgary professionals who speak out in opposition to the practice.
Sincerely,
Stuart Cooper
Campaign Director:
Fluoride Action Network
the neurotoxic risk posed to the fetus by fluoride. Yesterday, the City Council voted 13-1 to cancel O’Brien’s Wednesday presentation.
Section Two of the O'Brien report deals with the potential harms of fluoridation, with a portion dedicated to neurotoxicity, including discussion of some of the more recent studies. They point to the 2017 Bashash Mother-Offspring study that found that certain levels of fluoride in a pregnant woman's urine will lower the child’s IQ. They also commented on a second study from Bashash et al. 2018, which found that higher urinary fluoride levels during pregnancy was associated with attention hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms in children at 6-12 years of age.
But maybe more important than these acknowledgements, they point out that criticism from the pro-fluoridation lobby of these two studies was baseless and inaccurate:
One
widely-stated stated caveat/criticism for these two ELEMENT studies
just described is that the levels of urinary fluoride measured in
pregnant Mexican
women may not be relevant to Canada. This criticism is, however,
addressed by a
recent
Canadian study…this
study reveals that the maternal urinary fluoride levels for women in
communities with water fluoridation is comparable to that of Mexican
women in the ELEMENT cohort. The amount of black tea consumed may
further increase the exposure to fluoride. [p. 20]
The O’Brien report also mentions a soon-to-be published
Canadian IQ study, based on
this graduate thesis, that re-affirms fluoride exposure during pregnancy lowers IQ at the levels found in “optimally” fluoridated communities.
Summing it all up, the O’Brien Institute writes:
…there
is some new emerging evidence that fluoride exposure during pregnancy
may be harmful to the brain development of children, with important
studies
having been published subsequent to the review of this evidence by the
National Research Council in the U.S. in 2006...The new emerging studies in this domain need to be tracked very closely, and carefully evaluated as they appear. [p. 21]
These
acknowledgements and conclusions are incredibly damning for the
fluoridation-lobby, who have relied heavily upon the mantras that the
science is settled, that no studies have
found harm, and that no mainstream public health organizations have
questioned fluoridation’s safety. No reasonable parent would trade less than one cavity saved for a lifetime of cognitive impairment for their child. We can easily fix a cavity, but we cannot fix damage done to the brain.
We suspect that several factors may have contributed to the O’Brien report providing an honest assessment of the neurotoxicity data.
- First, they were specifically asked by the city council to be objective.
- Second, local organizers
Safe Water Calgary leveraged this request to get the O’Brien
Institute to interview some of our experts who highlighted these
studies: Hardy Limeback, DDS, PhD, Robert Dickson, MD, and Paul Connett,
PhD.
- Third, in 2018 a Canadian national survey of urine fluoride levels in pregnant women (Till
et al.) was performed in fluoridated and non-fluoridated
communities. It discovered similar fluoride levels to those found to
reduce IQ in the Bashash studies, making the IQ research nearly
impossible for Canadians to ignore.
- And fourth, local organizers and FAN professionals publicly emphasized the importance of the neurotoxicity studies, sharing this data with councilors.
Safe Water Calgary, along with members of the Fluoride Action Network and a team of international health and scientific experts, generated a Statement in Opposition to Artificial Water Fluoridation responding to CADTH’s claims, sharing it with councilors, the O’Brien Institute, and local media.
In response to O’Brien’s report, Canada’s top dental researcher and fluoride expert Dr. Hardy Limeback, has been tweeting his analysis of the O'Brien report to Calgary Council, which our friends at Fluoride Free Peel have compiled on their site. It’s also definitely worth a look.
Fluoride Free New Zealand issued an excellent press release on the O'Brien Institute's report, particularly as it excerpted many of their statements in the report.
Cancellation of Presentation and Public Hearing
To make matters worse for proponents of fluoridation, the city council voted 13-1 yesterday to cancel O’Brien’s Wednesday presentation and the ensuing public hearing. Councilors suggested they reschedule the hearing this fall, after the budget is resolved. Calgary is currently facing a severe budget crisis that will require councilors to cut $60 million dollars in spending this week, some of which will come out of fire and police budgets. The City's Administration further torpedoed plans to initiate fluoridation in their recommendation to council, stating:
Given the current conversation related to budget reductions, Administration has
not recommended any future work towards new services, including conducting feasibility studies or developing implementation plans (either
related to water fluoridation or other dental health initiatives).
With
$60 million in cuts being made to critical services, the $20-million
price tag for fluoridation is a non-starter, as it ought to be.
Councilors recognized this, prioritizing
firefighters, police, schools, and transportation infrastructure over
the profits of the fertilizer industry and distributors supplying the
chemical.We expect that the dental associations and American Fluoridation Society will attempt to lobby behind the scenes to amend the O’Brien report and re-ignite the debate this fall. However, Safe Water Calgary and FAN will build upon our momentum to ensure the public won't forget the harm posed by fluoridation, no matter how much time some councilors give proponents to re-group or work to revise history.
Please stay tuned, as we plan to provide additional coverage of the fluoridation battle in Calgary, including a bulletin taking an in-depth view of our response to the CADTH review, as well as a new video that includes news of how the fluoridation-lobby is actively working to silence Calgary professionals who speak out in opposition to the practice.
Sincerely,
Stuart Cooper
Campaign Director:
Fluoride Action Network
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