50 Reasons to Oppose Fluoridation
By Paul Connett, PhD (updated in September 2012)
Introduction
Dr. Paul Connett
In Europe, only
Ireland (73%), Poland (1%), Serbia (3%), Spain (11%), and the U.K. (11%)
fluoridate any of their water. Most developed countries, including Japan
and 97% of the western European population, do not consume fluoridated water.
In the U.S., about 70% of public water supplies are
fluoridated. This equates to approximately 185 million people, which is over half the number
of people drinking artificially fluoridated water worldwide. Some countries
have areas with high natural fluoride levels in the water. These include India,
China and parts of Africa. In these countries measures are being taken to remove
the fluoride because of the health problems that fluoride can cause.
Fluoridation is a bad medical practice
1)
Fluoride is the only chemical added to water for the purpose of medical
treatment. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) classifies
fluoride as a drug
when used to prevent or mitigate disease (FDA 2000). As a matter of basic
logic, adding fluoride to water for the sole purpose of preventing tooth decay
(a non-waterborne disease) is a form of medical treatment. All other water
treatment chemicals are added to improve the water’s quality or safety, which
fluoride does not do.
2)
Fluoridation is unethical. Informed
consent is standard practice for all medication, and one of the key reasons
why most of Western Europe has ruled against fluoridation. With water
fluoridation we are allowing governments to do to whole communities (forcing
people to take a medicine irrespective of their consent) what individual
doctors cannot do to individual patients.
Put another way: Does a voter have the right to
require that their neighbor ingest a certain medication (even if it is against
that neighbor’s will)?
3) The
dose cannot be controlled. Once fluoride is put in the water it is impossible
to control the dose each individual receives because people drink different
amounts of water. Being able to control the dose a patient receives is
critical. Some people (e.g., manual laborers, athletes, diabetics, and people
with kidney disease) drink substantially more water than others.
4) The
fluoride goes to everyone regardless of age, health or vulnerability. According
to Dr. Arvid Carlsson, the 2000 Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology and
one of the scientists who helped keep fluoridation out of Sweden:
“Water fluoridation goes against leading principles
of pharmacotherapy, which is progressing from a stereotyped medication — of the
type 1 tablet 3 times a day — to a much more individualized therapy as regards
both dosage and selection of drugs. The addition of drugs to the drinking water
means exactly the opposite of an individualized therapy” (Carlsson 1978).
5) People
now receive fluoride from many other sources besides water. Fluoridated
water is not the only way people are exposed to fluoride. Other sources of
fluoride include food and beverages processed with fluoridated water (Kiritsy
1996; Heilman 1999), fluoridated dental products (Bentley 1999; Levy 1999),
mechanically deboned meat (Fein 2001), tea (Levy 1999), and pesticide residues
(e.g., from cryolite) on food (Stannard 1991; Burgstahler 1997). It is now
widely acknowledged that exposure to non-water sources of fluoride has
significantly increased since the water fluoridation program first began (NRC
2006).
6)
Fluoride is not an essential nutrient. No disease, not even tooth
decay, is caused by a “fluoride
deficiency.”(NRC 1993; Institute of Medicine 1997, NRC 2006). Not a single
biological process has been shown to require fluoride. On the contrary there is
extensive evidence that fluoride can interfere with many important biological
processes. Fluoride interferes with numerous enzymes (Waldbott 1978). In
combination with aluminum, fluoride interferes with G-proteins (Bigay 1985,
1987). Such interactions give aluminum-fluoride complexes the potential to
interfere with signals from growth factors, hormones and neurotransmitters
(Strunecka & Patocka 1999; Li 2003). More and more studies indicate that
fluoride can interfere with biochemistry
in fundamental ways (Barbier 2010).
7) The
level in mothers’ milk is very low. Considering reason #6 it is perhaps
not surprising that the level of fluoride in mother’s
milk is remarkably low (0.004 ppm, NRC, 2006). This means that a bottle-fed
baby consuming fluoridated water (0.6 – 1.2 ppm) can get up to 300 times more
fluoride than a breast-fed baby. There are no benefits (see reasons #11-19),
only risks (see reasons #21-36), for infants ingesting this heightened level of
fluoride at such an early age (an age where susceptibility to environmental
toxins is particularly high).
8 )
Fluoride accumulates in the body. Healthy adult kidneys excrete 50
to 60% of the fluoride ingested each day (Marier & Rose 1971). The
remainder accumulates in the body, largely in calcifying tissues such as the
bones and pineal
gland (Luke 1997, 2001). Infants and children excrete less
fluoride from their kidneys and take up to 80% of ingested fluoride into their
bones (Ekstrand 1994). The fluoride concentration in bone steadily increases
over a lifetime (NRC 2006).
9) No
health agency in fluoridated countries is monitoring fluoride exposure or side
effects. No regular measurements are being made of the levels of
fluoride in urine, blood, bones, hair, or nails of either the general
population or sensitive subparts of the population (e.g., individuals with kidney disease).
10) There
has never been a single randomized controlled trial to demonstrate
fluoridation’s effectiveness or safety. Despite the fact that fluoride
has been added to community water supplies for over 60 years, “there have been
no randomized trials of water fluoridation” (Cheng 2007). Randomized trials are the
standard method for determining the safety and effectiveness of any purportedly
beneficial medical treatment. In 2000, the British Government’s “York Review”
could not give a single fluoridation trial a Grade A classification – despite
50 years of research (McDonagh 2000). The U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) continues to classify fluoride as an “unapproved new drug.”
Swallowing fluoride provides no (or very little)
benefit
11)
Benefit is topical not systemic. The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC, 1999, 2001) has now acknowledged that the mechanism
of fluoride’s benefits are mainly topical,
not systemic. There is no need whatsoever, therefore, to swallow fluoride to
protect teeth. Since the purported benefit of fluoride is topical, and the
risks are systemic, it makes more sense to deliver the fluoride directly to the
tooth in the form of toothpaste. Since swallowing fluoride is unnecessary, and
potentially dangerous, there is no justification for forcing people (against their
will) to ingest fluoride through their water supply.
12)
Fluoridation is not necessary. Most western, industrialized
countries have rejected
water fluoridation, but have nevertheless experienced the same decline in
childhood dental decay as fluoridated countries. (See data from World Health
Organization presented graphically in Figure).
13)
Fluoridation’s role in the decline of tooth decay is in serious doubt. The largest survey ever
conducted in the US (over 39,000 children from 84 communities) by the National
Institute of Dental Research showed little difference in
tooth decay among children in fluoridated and non-fluoridated communities
(Hileman 1989). According to NIDR researchers, the study found an average
difference of only 0.6 DMFS (Decayed, Missing, and Filled Surfaces) in the
permanent teeth of children aged 5-17 residing their entire lives in either
fluoridated or unfluoridated areas (Brunelle & Carlos, 1990). This
difference is less than one tooth surface, and less than 1% of the 100+ tooth
surfaces available in a child’s mouth. Large surveys from three Australian
states have found even less of a benefit, with decay reductions ranging from 0
to 0.3 of one permanent tooth surface (Spencer 1996; Armfield & Spencer
2004). None of these studies have allowed for the possible delayed eruption of
the teeth that may be caused by exposure to fluoride, for which there is some
evidence (Komarek 2005). A one-year delay in eruption of the permanent teeth
would eliminate the very small benefit recorded in these modern studies.
14)
NIH-funded study on individual fluoride ingestion and tooth decay found no
significant correlation. A multi-million dollar, U.S. National Institutes of
Health (NIH)-funded study
found no significant relationship between tooth decay and fluoride intake among
children. (Warren 2009) This is the first time tooth decay has been
investigated as a function of individual exposure (as opposed to mere residence
in a fluoridated community).
15) Tooth
decay is high in low-income communities that have been fluoridated for years. Despite
some claims to the contrary, water fluoridation cannot prevent the oral health crises
that result from rampant poverty, inadequate nutrition, and lack of access to
dental care. There have been numerous reports of severe dental crises in
low-income neighborhoods of US cities that have been fluoridated for over 20
years (e.g., Boston, Cincinnati, New York City, and Pittsburgh). In addition,
research has repeatedly found fluoridation to be ineffective at preventing the
most serious oral health problem facing poor children, namely “baby bottle tooth decay,”
otherwise known as early childhood caries (Barnes 1992; Shiboski 2003).
16) Tooth
decay does not go up when fluoridation is stopped. Where
fluoridation has been discontinued in
communities from Canada, the former East Germany, Cuba and Finland, dental
decay has not increased but has generally continued to decrease (Maupomé 2001;
Kunzel & Fischer, 1997, 2000; Kunzel 2000; Seppa 2000).
17) Tooth
decay was coming down before fluoridation started. Modern
research shows that decay rates were coming down before fluoridation was
introduced in Australia and New Zealand and have continued to decline even
after its benefits would have been maximized. (Colquhoun 1997; Diesendorf
1986). As the following figure indicates, many other factors are responsible
for the decline of tooth decay that has been universally reported throughout
the western world.
18) The
studies that launched fluoridation were methodologically flawed. The early
trials conducted between 1945 and 1955 in North America that helped to launch fluoridation,
have been heavily criticized for their poor methodology and poor choice of
control communities (De Stefano 1954; Sutton 1959, 1960, 1996; Ziegelbecker
1970). According to Dr. Hubert Arnold, a statistician from the University of
California at Davis, the early fluoridation trials “are especially rich in
fallacies, improper design, invalid use of statistical methods, omissions of
contrary data, and just plain muddleheadedness and hebetude.” Serious questions
have also been raised about Trendley Dean’s (the father of fluoridation) famous
21-city study from 1942 (Ziegelbecker 1981).
Children are being over-exposed to fluoride
19)
Children are being over-exposed to fluoride. The
fluoridation program has massively failed to achieve one of its key objectives,
i.e., to lower dental decay rates while limiting the occurrence of dental fluorosis (a
discoloring of tooth enamel caused by too much fluoride. The goal of the early
promoters of fluoridation was to limit dental fluorosis (in its very mild form)
to10% of children (NRC 1993, pp. 6-7). In 2010, however, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that 41% of
American adolescents had dental fluorosis, with 8.6% having mild fluorosis and
3.6% having either moderate or severe dental fluorosis (Beltran-Aguilar 2010).
As the 41% prevalence figure is a national average and includes children living
in fluoridated and unfluoridated areas, the fluorosis rate in fluoridated
communities will obviously be higher. The British Government’s York Review
estimated that up to 48% of children in fluoridated areas worldwide have dental
fluorosis in all forms, with 12.5% having fluorosis of aesthetic
concern (McDonagh, 2000).
20) The
highest doses of fluoride are going to bottle-fed babies. Because
of their sole reliance on liquids for their food intake, infants
consuming formula made with fluoridated water have the highest exposure to
fluoride, by bodyweight, in the population. Because infant exposure to
fluoridated water has been repeatedly found to be a major risk factor for
developing dental fluorosis later in life (Marshall 2004; Hong 2006; Levy
2010), a number of dental
researchers have recommended that parents of newborns not use fluoridated
water when reconstituting formula (Ekstrand 1996; Pendrys 1998; Fomon 2000;
Brothwell 2003; Marshall 2004). Even the American Dental Association (ADA), the
most ardent institutional proponent of fluoridation, distributed a November 6,
2006 email alert to its members recommending that parents be advised that
formula should be made with “low or no-fluoride water.” Unfortunately, the ADA
has done little to get this information into the hands of parents. As a result,
many parents remain unaware of the fluorosis risk from infant exposure to
fluoridated water.
Evidence of harm to other tissues
21) Dental
fluorosis may be an indicator of wider systemic damage. There
have been many suggestions as to the possible biochemical
mechanisms underlying the development of dental fluorosis (Matsuo 1998; Den
Besten 1999; Sharma 2008; Duan 2011; Tye 2011) and they are complicated for a
lay reader. While promoters of fluoridation are content to dismiss dental
fluorosis (in its milder forms) as merely a cosmetic effect, it is rash to assume
that fluoride is not impacting other developing tissues when it is visibly
damaging the teeth by some biochemical mechanism (Groth 1973; Colquhoun 1997).
Moreover, ingested fluoride can only cause dental fluorosis during the period
before the permanent teeth have erupted (6-8 years), other tissues are
potentially susceptible to damage throughout life. For example, in areas of
naturally high levels of fluoride the first indicator of harm is dental
fluorosis in children. In the same communities many older people develop skeletal
fluorosis.
22)
Fluoride may damage the brain. According to the National
Research Council (2006), “it is apparent that fluorides have the ability to
interfere with the functions of the brain.” In a review of
the literature commissioned by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),
fluoride has been listed among about 100 chemicals for which there is
“substantial evidence of developmental neurotoxicity.” Animal experiments
show that fluoride accumulates in the brain and alters mental behavior in a
manner consistent with a neurotoxic agent (Mullenix 1995). In total, there have
now been over 100 animal
experiments showing that fluoride can damage the brain and
impact learning and behavior. According to fluoridation proponents, these
animal studies can be ignored because high doses were used. However, it is
important to note that rats generally require five times more fluoride to reach
the same plasma levels in humans (Sawan 2010). Further, one animal experiment
found effects at remarkably low doses (Varner 1998). In this study, rats fed
for one year with 1 ppm fluoride in their water (the same level used in
fluoridation programs), using either sodium fluoride or aluminum fluoride, had
morphological changes to their kidneys and brains, an increased uptake of
aluminum in the brain, and the formation of beta-amyloid deposits which are
associated with Alzheimer’s disease. Other animal studies have found effects on
the brain at water fluoride levels as low as 5 ppm (Liu 2010).
23)
Fluoride may lower IQ. There have now been 33 studies from
China, Iran, India and Mexico that have reported an association between
fluoride exposure and reduced IQ. One of these studies (Lin 1991) indicates
that even just moderate levels of fluoride exposure (e.g., 0.9 ppm in the
water) can exacerbate the neurological defects of iodine deficiency. Other
studies have found IQ reductions at 1.9 ppm (Xiang 2003a,b); 0.3-3.0 ppm (Ding
2011); 1.8-3.9 ppm (Xu 1994); 2.0 ppm (Yao 1996, 1997); 2.1-3.2 ppm (An 1992);
2.38 ppm (Poureslami 2011); 2.45 ppm (Eswar 2011); 2.5 ppm (Seraj 2006); 2.85
ppm (Hong 2001); 2.97 ppm (Wang 2001, Yang 1994); 3.15 ppm (Lu 2000); 4.12 ppm
(Zhao 1996). In the Ding study, each 1 ppm increase of fluoride in urine
was associated with a loss of 0.59 IQ points. None of these studies indicate an
adequate margin of safety to protect all children drinking artificially
fluoridated water from this affect. According to the National Research Council
(2006), “the consistency of the results [in fluoride/IQ studies] appears
significant enough to warrant additional research on the effects of fluoride on
intelligence.” The NRC’s conclusion has recently been amplified by a team of
Harvard scientists whose fluoride/IQ meta-review concludes that fluoride’s
impact on the developing brain should be a “high research priority.” (Choi et
al., 2012). Except for one small IQ study from New Zealand (Spittle 1998) no
fluoridating country has yet investigated the matter.
24) Fluoride
may cause non-IQ neurotoxic effects. Reduced IQ is not the only
neurotoxic effect that may result from fluoride exposure. At least three human
studies have reported an association between fluoride exposure and impaired
visual-spatial organization (Calderon 2000; Li 2004; Rocha-Amador 2009); while
four other studies have found an association between prenatal fluoride exposure
and fetal brain damage
(Han 1989; Du 1992; Dong 1993; Yu 1996).
25)
Fluoride affects the pineal gland. Studies by Jennifer Luke
(2001) show that fluoride accumulates in the human pineal gland to
very high levels. In her Ph.D. thesis, Luke has also shown in animal studies
that fluoride reduces melatonin production and leads to an earlier onset of
puberty (Luke 1997). Consistent with Luke’s findings, one of the earliest
fluoridation trials in the U.S. (Schlesinger 1956) reported that on average
young girls in the fluoridated community reached menstruation 5 months earlier
than girls in the non-fluoridated community. Inexplicably, no fluoridating
country has attempted to reproduce either Luke’s or Schlesinger’s findings or
examine the issue any further.
26)
Fluoride affects thyroid function. According to the U.S. National
Research Council (2006), “several lines of information indicate an effect of
fluoride exposure on thyroid function.”
In the Ukraine, Bachinskii (1985) found a lowering of thyroid function, among
otherwise healthy people, at 2.3 ppm fluoride in water. In the middle of the
20th century, fluoride was prescribed by a number of European doctors to reduce
the activity of the thyroid gland for those suffering from hyperthyroidism
(overactive thyroid) (Stecher 1960; Waldbott 1978). According to a clinical
study by Galletti and Joyet (1958), the thyroid function of hyperthyroid
patients was effectively reduced at just 2.3 to 4.5 mg/day of fluoride ion. To
put this finding in perspective, the Department of Health and Human Services
(DHHS, 1991) has estimated that total fluoride exposure in fluoridated
communities ranges from 1.6 to 6.6 mg/day. This is a remarkable fact,
particularly considering the rampant and increasing problem of hypothyroidism
(underactive thyroid) in the United States and other fluoridated countries.
Symptoms of hypothyroidism include depression, fatigue, weight gain, muscle and
joint pains, increased cholesterol levels, and heart disease. In 2010, the
second most prescribed drug of the year was Synthroid (sodium
levothyroxine) which is a hormone replacement drug used to treat an underactive
thyroid.
27) Fluoride
causes arthritic symptoms. Some of the early symptoms of skeletal
fluorosis (a fluoride-induced bone and joint disease that impacts millions
of people in India, China, and Africa), mimic the symptoms of arthritis
(Singh 1963; Franke 1975; Teotia 1976; Carnow 1981; Czerwinski 1988; DHHS
1991). According to a review on fluoridation published in Chemical &
Engineering News, “Because some of the clinical symptoms mimic arthritis, the
first two clinical phases of skeletal fluorosis could be easily misdiagnosed”
(Hileman 1988). Few, if any, studies have been done to determine the extent of
this misdiagnosis, and whether the high prevalence of arthritis in America (1
in 3 Americans have some form of arthritis – CDC, 2002) and other fluoridated
countries is related to growing fluoride exposure, which is highly plausible.
Even when individuals in the U.S. suffer advanced forms of skeletal fluorosis
(from drinking large amounts of tea), it has taken years of
misdiagnoses before doctors finally correctly diagnosed the condition
as fluorosis.
28)
Fluoride damages bone. An early fluoridation trial (Newburgh-Kingston 1945-55)
found a significant two-fold increase in cortical bone defects among children
in the fluoridated community (Schlesinger 1956). The cortical bone is the
outside layer of the bone and is important to protect against fracture. While
this result was not considered important at the time with respect to bone
fractures, it did prompt questions about a possible link to osteosarcoma
(Caffey, 1955; NAS, 1977). In 2001, Alarcon-Herrera and co-workers reported a
linear correlation between the severity of dental fluorosis and the frequency
of bone fractures in both children and adults in a high fluoride area in
Mexico.
29)
Fluoride may increase hip fractures in the elderly. When
high doses of fluoride (average 26 mg per day) were used in trials to treat
patients with osteoporosis in an effort to harden their bones and reduce
fracture rates, it actually led to a higher number of fractures, particularly hip fractures
(Inkovaara 1975; Gerster 1983; Dambacher 1986; O’Duffy 1986; Hedlund 1989;
Bayley 1990; Gutteridge 1990. 2002; Orcel 1990; Riggs 1990 and Schnitzler
1990). Hip fracture is a very serious issue for the elderly, often leading to a
loss of independence or a shortened life. There have been over a dozen studies
published since 1990 that have investigated a possible relationship between hip
fractures and long term consumption of artificially fluoridated water or water
with high natural levels. The results have been mixed – some have found
an association and others have not. Some have even claimed a protective effect.
One very important study in China, which examined hip fractures in six Chinese
villages, found what appears to be a dose-related increase in hip fracture as
the concentration of fluoride rose from 1 ppm to 8 ppm (Li 2001) offering
little comfort to those who drink a lot of fluoridated water. Moreover, in the
only human epidemiological study to assess bone strength as a function of bone
fluoride concentration, researchers from the University of Toronto found that
(as with animal studies) the strength of bone declined with increasing fluoride
content (Chachra 2010). Finally, a recent study from Iowa
(Levy 2009), published data suggesting that low-level fluoride exposure may
have a detrimental effect on cortical bone density
in girls (an effect that has been repeatedly documented
in clinical trials and which has been posited as an important mechanism by which
fluoride may increase bone fracture rates).
30) People
with impaired kidney function are particularly vulnerable to bone damage. Because
of their inability to effectively excrete fluoride, people with kidney disease
are prone to accumulating high levels of fluoride in their bone and blood. As a
result of this high fluoride body burden, kidney patients have an elevated risk
for developing skeletal fluorosis. In one of the few U.S. studies investigating
the matter, crippling skeletal fluorosis was documented among patients with
severe kidney disease drinking water with just 1.7 ppm fluoride (Johnson 1979).
Since severe skeletal fluorosis in kidney patients has been detected in small
case studies, it is likely that larger, systematic studies would detect
skeletal fluorosis at even lower fluoride levels.
31)
Fluoride may cause bone cancer (osteosarcoma). A U.S. government-funded
animal study found a dose-dependent increase in bone cancer (osteosarcoma) in
fluoride-treated, male rats (NTP 1990). Following the results of this study,
the National Cancer Institute (NCI) reviewed national cancer data in the U.S.
and found a significantly higher rate of osteosarcoma (a bone cancer) in young
men in fluoridated versus unfluoridated areas (Hoover et al 1991a). While the
NCI concluded (based on an analysis lacking statistical power) that
fluoridation was not the cause (Hoover et al 1991b), no explanation was
provided to explain the higher rates in the fluoridated areas. A smaller study
from New Jersey (Cohn 1992) found osteosarcoma rates to be up to 6 times higher
in young men living in fluoridated versus unfluoridated areas. Other epidemiological
studies of varying size and quality have failed to find this relationship (a
summary of these can be found in Bassin, 2001 and Connett & Neurath, 2005).
There are three reasons why a fluoride-osteosarcoma connection is plausible:
First, fluoride accumulates to a high level in bone. Second, fluoride
stimulates bone growth. And, third, fluoride can interfere with the genetic
apparatus of bone cells in several ways; it has been shown to be mutagenic,
cause chromosome damage, and interfere with the enzymes involved with DNA
repair in both cell and tissue studies (Tsutsui 1984; Caspary 1987; Kishi 1993;
Mihashi 1996; Zhang 2009). In addition to cell and tissue studies, a
correlation between fluoride exposure and chromosome damage in humans has also
been reported (Sheth 1994; Wu 1995; Meng 1997; Joseph 2000).
32)
Proponents have failed to refute the Bassin-Osteosarcoma study. In 2001,
Elise Bassin, a dentist, successfully defended her doctoral thesis at Harvard
in which she found that young boys had a five-to-seven fold increased risk of
getting osteosarcoma by the age of 20 if they drank fluoridated water during
their mid-childhood growth spurt (age 6 to 8). The study was published in 2006
(Bassin 2006) but has been largely discounted by fluoridating countries because
her thesis adviser Professor Chester Douglass
(a promoter of fluoridation and a consultant for Colgate) promised a larger
study that he claimed would discount her thesis (Douglass and Joshipura, 2006).
Now, after 5 years of waiting the Douglass study has finally been published
(Kim 2011) but in no way does this study discount Bassin’s findings. The study,
which used far fewer controls than Bassin’s analysis, did not even attempt to
assess the age-specific window of risk that Bassin identified. Indeed, by the
authors’ own admission, the study had no capacity to assess the risk of
osteosarcoma among children and adolescents (the precise population of
concern). For a critique of the Douglass study, click here.
33)
Fluoride may cause reproductive problems. Fluoride administered
to animals at high doses wreaks havoc on the male reproductive system – it
damages sperm and increases the rate of infertility in
a number of different species (Kour 1980; Chinoy 1989; Chinoy 1991; Susheela
1991; Chinoy 1994; Kumar 1994; Narayana 1994a,b; Zhao 1995; Elbetieha 2000;
Ghosh 2002; Zakrzewska 2002). In addition, an epidemiological study from the US
found increased rates of infertility among couples living in areas with 3 ppm
or more fluoride in the water (Freni 1994), two studies have found increased
fertility among men living in high-fluoride areas of China and India (Liu 1988;
Neelam 1987); four studies have found reduced level of circulating testosterone
in males living in high fluoride areas (Hao 2010; Chen P 1997; Susheela 1996;
Barot 1998), and a study of fluoride-exposed workers reported a “subclinical
reproductive effect” (Ortiz-Perez 2003). While animal studies by FDA
researchers have failed
to find evidence of reproductive toxicity in fluoride-exposed rats (Sprando
1996, 1997, 1998), the National Research Council (2006) has recommended that,
“the relationship between fluoride and fertility requires additional study.”
34) Some
individuals are highly sensitive to low levels of fluoride as
shown by case
studies and double blind studies. In one study, which lasted 13 years,
Feltman and Kosel (1961) showed that about 1% of patients given 1 mg of
fluoride each day developed negative reactions. Many individuals have reported
suffering from symptoms such as fatigue, headaches, rashes and stomach and
gastro intestinal tract problems, which disappear when they avoid fluoride in
their water and diet. (Shea 1967; Waldbott 1978; Moolenburgh 1987) Frequently
the symptoms reappear when they are unwittingly exposed to fluoride again
(Spittle, 2008). No fluoridating government has conducted scientific studies to
take this issue beyond these anecdotal reports. Without the willingness of
governments to investigate these reports scientifically, should we as a society
be forcing these people to ingest fluoride?
35) Other
subsets of population are more vulnerable to fluoride’s toxicity. In
addition to people suffering from impaired kidney function discussed in reason
#30 other subsets of the population are more vulnerable to fluoride’s toxic
effects. According to the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
(ATSDR 1993) these include: infants, the
elderly, and those with diabetes mellitus. Also
vulnerable are those who suffer from malnutrition (e.g.,
calcium, magnesium, vitamin C, vitamin D and iodine deficiencies and
protein-poor diets) and those who have diabetes
insipidus. See: Greenberg 1974; Klein 1975; Massler & Schour 1952;
Marier & Rose 1977; Lin 1991; Chen 1997; Seow 1994; Teotia 1998.
No Margin of Safety
36) There
is no margin of safety for several health effects. No one
can deny that high natural levels of fluoride damage health. Millions of people
in India and China have had their health compromised by fluoride. The real
question is whether there is an adequate margin of safety between the doses
shown to cause harm in published studies and the total dose people receive
consuming uncontrolled amounts of fluoridated water and non-water sources of
fluoride. This margin of safety has to take into account the wide range of
individual sensitivity expected in a large population (a safety factor of 10 is
usually applied to the lowest level causing harm). Another safety factor is
also needed to take into account the wide range of doses to which people are
exposed. There is clearly no margin of safety for dental fluorosis (CDC, 2010)
and based on the following studies nowhere near an adequate margin of safety
for lowered IQ (Xiang 2003a,b; Ding 2011; Choi 2012); lowered thyroid function
(Galletti & Joyet 1958; Bachinskii 1985; Lin 1991); bone fractures in
children (Alarcon-Herrera 2001) or hip fractures in the elderly (Kurttio 1999;
Li 2001). All of these harmful effects are discussed in the NRC (2006) review.
Environmental Justice
37)
Low-income families penalized by fluoridation. Those
most likely to suffer from poor nutrition, and thus more likely to be more
vulnerable to fluoride’s toxic effects, are the poor, who unfortunately, are
the very people being targeted
by new fluoridation programs. While at heightened risk, poor families are least
able to afford avoiding fluoride once it is added to the water supply. No financial
support is being offered to these families to help them get alternative water
supplies or to help pay the costs of treating unsightly cases of dental
fluorosis.
38) Black
and Hispanic children are more vulnerable to fluoride’s toxicity. According
to the CDC’s national survey of dental fluorosis, black and Mexican-American
children have significantly higher rates
of dental fluorosis than white children (Beltran-Aguilar 2005, Table 23). The
recognition that minority children appear to be more vulnerable to toxic
effects of fluoride, combined with the fact that low-income families are less
able to avoid drinking fluoridated water, has prompted prominent leaders in the
environmental-justice movement to oppose mandatory fluoridation in Georgia. In
a statement issued in May 2011, Andrew Young, a colleague of Martin Luther
King, Jr., and former Mayor of Atlanta and former US Ambassador to the United
Nations, stated:
“I am most deeply concerned for poor families who
have babies: if they cannot afford unfluoridated water for their babies’ milk
formula, do their babies not count? Of course they do. This is an issue of fairness,
civil rights, and compassion. We must find better ways to prevent cavities,
such as helping those most at risk for cavities obtain access to the services
of a dentist…My father was a dentist. I formerly was a strong believer in the
benefits of water fluoridation for preventing cavities. But many things that we
began to do 50 or more years ago we now no longer do, because we have learned
further information that changes our practices and policies. So it is with
fluoridation.”
39)
Minorities are not being warned about their vulnerabilities to fluoride. The
CDC is not warning black and Mexican-American children that they have higher
rates of dental fluorosis than Caucasian children (see #38). This extra
vulnerability may extend to other toxic effects of fluoride. Black
Americans have higher rates of lactose intolerance, kidney problems and
diabetes, all of which may exacerbate fluoride’s toxicity.
40) Tooth
decay reflects low-income not low-fluoride intake. Since
dental decay is most concentrated in poor communities, we should be spending
our efforts trying to increase the access to dental care for low-income
families. The highest rates of tooth decay today can be found in low-income areas
that have been fluoridated for many years. The real “Oral Health Crisis” that
exists today in the United States, is not a lack of fluoride but poverty and
lack of dental insurance. The Surgeon General has estimated that 80% of
dentists in the US do not treat children on Medicaid.
The largely untested chemicals used in fluoridation
programs
41) The
chemicals used to fluoridate water are not pharmaceutical grade. Instead,
they largely come from the wet scrubbing systems of the phosphate fertilizer
industry. These chemicals (90% of which are sodium fluorosilicate and
fluorosilicic acid), are classified hazardous wastes contaminated with various
impurities. Recent testing by the National Sanitation Foundation suggest that
the levels of arsenic in these silicon fluorides are relatively high (up to 1.6
ppb after dilution into public water) and of potential concern (NSF 2000 and
Wang 2000). Arsenic is a known human carcinogen for which there is no safe
level. This one contaminant alone could be increasing cancer rates – and
unnecessarily so.
42) The
silicon fluorides have not been tested comprehensively. The
chemical usually tested in animal studies is pharmaceutical grade sodium
fluoride, not industrial grade fluorosilicic acid. Proponents claim that once
the silicon fluorides have been diluted at the public water works they are
completely dissociated to free fluoride ions and hydrated silica and thus there
is no need to examine the toxicology of these compounds. However, while a study
from the University of Michigan (Finney et al., 2006) showed complete
dissociation at neutral pH, in acidic conditions (pH 3) there was a stable
complex containing five fluoride ions. Thus the possibility arises that such a
complex may be regenerated in the stomach where the pH lies between 1 and 2.
43) The
silicon fluorides may increase lead uptake into children’s blood. Studies
by Masters and Coplan (1999, 2000, 2007), and to a lesser extent
Macek (2006), show an association between the use of fluorosilicic acid (and
its sodium salt) to fluoridate water and an increased uptake of lead into
children’s blood. Because of lead’s acknowledged ability to damage the
developing brain, this is a very serious finding. Nevertheless, it is being
largely ignored by fluoridating countries. This association received some
strong biochemical support from an animal study by Sawan et al. (2010) who
found that exposure of rats to a combination of fluorosilicic acid and lead in
their drinking water increased the uptake of lead into blood some threefold
over exposure to lead alone.
44)
Fluoride may leach lead from pipes, brass fittings and soldered joints. In
tightly controlled laboratory experiments, Maas et al (2007) have shown that fluoridating
agents in combination with chlorinating agents such as chloroamine increase the
leaching of lead from brass fittings used in plumbing. While proponents may
argue about the neurotoxic effects of low levels of fluoride there is no
argument that lead at very low levels lowers IQ in children.
Continued promotion of fluoridation is unscientific
45) Key
health studies have not been done. In the January 2008 issue of
Scientific American, Professor John Doull, the chairman of the important 2006 National Research Council
review, Fluoride in Drinking Water: A Review of EPA’s Standards, is quoted as
saying:
What the committee found is that we’ve gone with the
status quo regarding fluoride for many years—for too long really—and now we
need to take a fresh look . . . In the scientific community people tend to
think this is settled. I mean, when the U.S. surgeon general comes out and says
this is one of the top 10 greatest achievements of the 20th century, that’s a
hard hurdle to get over. But when we looked at the studies that have been done,
we found that many of these questions are unsettled and we have much less
information than we should, considering how long this [fluoridation] has been
going on.
The absence of studies is being used by promoters as
meaning the absence of harm. This is an irresponsible position.
46)
Endorsements do not represent scientific evidence. Many
of those promoting fluoridation rely heavily on a list of endorsements. However,
the U.S. PHS first endorsed fluoridation in 1950, before one single trial had
been completed and before any significant health studies had been published
(see chapters 9 and 10 in The Case
Against Fluoride for the significance of this PHS endorsement for the
future promotion of fluoridation). Many other endorsements swiftly followed
with little evidence of any scientific rational for doing so. The continued use
of these endorsements has more to do with political science than medical
science.
47) Review
panels hand-picked to deliver a pro-fluoridation result. Every
so often, particularly when their fluoridation program is under threat,
governments of fluoridating countries hand-pick panels to deliver reports that
provide the necessary re-endorsement of the practice. In their recent book
Fluoride Wars (2009), which is otherwise slanted toward fluoridation, Alan
Freeze and Jay Lehr concede this point when they write:
There is one anti-fluoridationist charge that does
have some truth to it. Anti-fluoride forces have always claimed that the many
government-sponsored review panels set up over the years to assess the costs
and benefits of fluoridation were stacked in favor of fluoridation. A review of
the membership of the various panels confirms this charge. The expert
committees that put together reports by the American Association for the
Advancement of Science in 1941, 1944 and 1954; the National Academy of Sciences
in 1951, 1971, 1977 and 1993; the World Health Organization in 1958 and 1970;
and the U.S. Public Health Service in 1991 are rife with the names of
well-known medical and dental researchers who actively campaigned on behalf of
fluoridation or whose research was held in high regard in the pro-fluoridation
movement. Membership was interlocking and incestuous.
The most recent examples of these self-fulfilling
prophecies have come from the Irish Fluoridation Forum (2002); the National
Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC, 2007) and Health Canada (2008,
2010). The latter used a panel of six experts to review the health literature.
Four of the six were pro-fluoridation dentists and the other two had no
demonstrated expertise on fluoride. A notable exception to this trend was the
appointment by the U.S. National Research Council of the first balanced panel
of experts ever selected to look at fluoride’s toxicity in the U.S. This panel
of twelve reviewed the US EPA’s safe drinking water standards for fluoride.
After three and half years the panel concluded in a 507- page report that the
safe drinking water standard was not protective of health and a new maximum
contaminant level goal (MCLG) should be determined (NRC, 2006). If normal
toxicological procedures and appropriate margins of safety were applied to
their findings this report should spell an end to water fluoridation.
Unfortunately in January of 2011 the US EPA Office of Water made it clear that
they would not determine a value for the MCLG that would jeopardize the water
fluoridation program (EPA press release, Jan 7, 2011. Once again politics was allowed
to trump science.
More and more independent scientists oppose
fluoridation
48) Many
scientists oppose fluoridation. Proponents of fluoridation
have maintained for many years— despite the fact that the earliest opponents of
fluoridation were biochemists—that the only people opposed to fluoridation are
not bona fide scientists. Today, as more and more scientists, doctors, dentists
and other professionals, read the primary literature for themselves, rather
than relying on self-serving statements from the ADA and the CDC, they are
realizing that they and the general public have not been diligently informed by
their professional bodies on this subject. As of January 2012, over 4,000
professionals have signed a statement
calling for an end to water fluoridation worldwide. This statement and a list
of signatories can be found on the website of the Fluoride Action
Network. A glimpse of the caliber of those opposing fluoridation can be
gleaned by watching the 28-minute video “Professional
Perspectives on Water fluoridation” which can be viewed online at the same
FAN site.
Proponents’ dubious tactics
49) Proponents
usually refuse to defend fluoridation in open debate. While
pro-fluoridation officials continue to promote fluoridation with undiminished
fervor, they usually refuse to defend
the practice in open public debate – even when challenged to do so by
organizations such as the Association for Science in the Public Interest, the
American College of Toxicology, or the U.S. EPA (Bryson 2004). According to Dr.
Michael Easley, a prominent lobbyist for fluoridation in the US, “Debates give
the illusion that a scientific controversy exists when no credible people
support the fluorophobics’ view” (Easley, 1999). In light of proponents’
refusal to debate this issue, Dr. Edward Groth, a Senior Scientist at Consumers
Union, observed that, “the political profluoridation stance has evolved into a
dogmatic, authoritarian, essentially antiscientific posture, one that
discourages open debate of scientific issues” (Martin 1991).
50)
Proponents use very dubious tactics to promote fluoridation. Many scientists,
doctors and dentists who have spoken out publicly on this issue have been
subjected to censorship
and intimidation (Martin 1991). Dr. Phyllis
Mullenix was fired from her position as Chair of Toxicology at Forsythe
Dental Center for publishing her findings on fluoride and the brain (Mullenix
1995); and Dr.
William Marcus was fired from the EPA for questioning the government’s
handling of the NTP’s fluoride-cancer study (Bryson 2004). Many dentists and
even doctors tell opponents in private that they are opposed to this practice
but dare not speak out in public because of peer pressure and the fear of
recriminations. Tactics like this would not be necessary if those promoting
fluoridation were on secure scientific and ethical grounds.
Conclusion
When it comes to controversies surrounding toxic
chemicals, vested interests traditionally do their very best to discount animal
studies and quibble with epidemiological findings. In the past, political
pressures have led government agencies to drag their feet on regulating
asbestos, benzene, DDT, PCBs, tetraethyl lead, tobacco and dioxins. With
fluoridation we have had a sixty-year delay. Unfortunately, because government
officials and dental leaders have put so much of their credibility on the line
defending fluoridation, and because of the huge liabilities waiting in the
wings if they admit that fluoridation has caused an increase in hip fracture,
arthritis, bone cancer, brain disorders or thyroid problems, it will be very
difficult for them to speak honestly and openly about the issue. But they must,
not only to protect millions of people from unnecessary harm, but to protect
the notion that, at its core, public health policy must be based on sound
science, not political expediency. They have a tool with which to do this: it’s
called the Precautionary Principle. Simply put, this says: if in doubt leave it
out. This is what most European
countries have done and their children’s teeth have not suffered, while
their public’s trust has been strengthened.
Just how much doubt is needed on just one of the
health concerns identified above, to override a benefit, which when quantified
in the largest survey ever conducted in the US, amounts to less than one tooth
surface (out of 128) in a child’s mouth?
While fluoridation may not be the greatest
environmental health threat, it is one of the easiest to end. It is as easy as
turning off a spigot in the public water works. But to turn off that spigot takes
political will and to get that we need masses more people informed and
organized. Please get these 50 reasons to all your friends and encourage them
to get fluoride out of their community and to help ban this practice worldwide.
Postscript
Further arguments against fluoridation, can be viewed
at http://www.fluoridealert.org and
in the book The Case Against Fluoridation (Chelsea Green, 2010). Arguments for
fluoridation can be found at http://www.ada.org
Publication history of the 50 Reasons
The 50 Reasons were first compiled by Paul Connett
and presented in person to the Irish Fluoridation Forum in October 2000. The
document was refined in 2004 and published in Medical Veritas. In the introduction to the 2004 version
it was explained that after over four years the Irish authorities had not been
able to muster a response to the 50 Reasons, despite agreeing to do so in 2000.
Eventually, an anonymous, incomplete and superficial response was posted on the
Irish Department of Health and Children’s website (see this response and
addendum at:http://www.dohc.ie/other_health_issues/dental_research/. Paul
Connett’s comprehensive response to this response can be accessed
at http://www.fluoridealert.org/50reasons.ireland.pdf. We learned on
August 7, 2011 that this governmental response was prepared by an external
contractor at a cost to the Irish taxpayers’ of over 30,000 Euros.
Since 2004, there have been many major scientific
developments including the publication of the U.S. National Research Council
report (NRC, 2006); the publication of Bassin’s study on Osteosarcoma (Bassin
2006), and many more studies of fluoride’s interaction with the brain, that
necessitated a major update of the 50 Reasons in August 2011. This update was
made with the generous assistance of James Beck, MD, PhD, Michael Connett,
JD, Hardy Limeback, DDS, PhD, David McRae and Spedding Micklem,
D.Phil. Additional developments in 2012, including FAN’s translation of over
20 Chinese studies on fluoride toxicity and publication of the Harvard
team’s meta-review of fluoride and IQ (Choi 2012), warranted a further update
in August 2012, with the extremely helpful assistance of my son, Michael
Connett.
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