Fluoridation is Useless and Especially Harmful
to Poor Children, Research Shows
According to
Healthy People 2020, America’s poorest children suffer high tooth decay
rates, double that of non-poor children. Seventy-five years of water
fluoridation failed to narrow oral health disparities
between haves and have nots. Cavities are linked to poverty,
malnutrition and inability to get dental care; not to fluoride
deficiency. Further, malnutrition, more
prevalent in low-income families, is linked to more fluoride-induced tooth damage (dental fluorosis), reports the Fluoride
Action Network (FAN).
Paul Connett,
PhD, FAN Director says, “In honor of Children’s Dental Health Month,
everyone reading this must contact their local and state legislators.
Tell them to stop funding and/or implementing
fluoridation. A large body of evidence shows fluoride
is neurotoxic. We shouldn’t sacrifice children’s mental health to continue a failed dental health program.”
Healthy
People 2020, a project of the Office of Disease Prevention and
Health Promotion, reports: 66% of 6-9 year-olds and 60% of 13-15
year-olds from the lowest income families experienced tooth decay
compared to 33% of non-poor. The uninsured or publicly-insured
suffer more from untreated decay because most dentists shun them.
Connett says, “Most dentists prefer to treat the water rather than the teeth of low-income folks.”
Current research (e.g. Irigoyen-Camacho 2015; Kajale 2015; Whitford 1990) supports a 1952 Journal
of the American Dental Association (JADA) study linking poor
nutrition, especially calcium intake, to increased prevalence and
severity of dental fluorosis – factors also linked to cavities.
Fluoridation
began with the discovery that people consuming water naturally high in
fluoride had discolored teeth with less cavities. Over-zealous dentists
urged supplementation of “fluoride deficient”
water supplies to equalize decay rates across America without safety
studies. Instead, they spread dental fluorosis. Today over 70% of
community drinking water supplies are fluoridated. Yet, tooth
decay is now a national crisis along with dental fluorosis – which
has skyrocketed.
We need safer ways to protect children’s teeth, such as the Childsmile
program in Scotland. A healthy diet, good oral hygiene, and access
to dental care are prerequisites for healthy teeth. Consuming a
fluoride-free diet doesn’t cause tooth decay.
Lack of access to dental care is fueling a dental health crisis. Pew
Charitable Trusts in 2012, reported that preventable dental
conditions made up more than 830,000 emergency room visits in 2009 – up
from 16% in 2006. JADA reported 101
deaths from the consequences of untreated tooth decay.
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