It turns out those fluoride 'fears' came to be:
"Some recent studies suggest that over-consumption of fluoride can raise the
risks of disorders affecting teeth, bones, the brain and the thyroid gland,”
reports Scientific American editors
(January 2008). “Scientific attitudes toward fluoridation may be starting to
shift,” writes author Dan Fagin.
“Fluoride, the most
consumed drug in the USA, is deliberately added to 2/3 of public water supplies
theoretically to reduce tooth decay, but with no scientifically-valid evidence
proving safety or effectiveness,” says
lawyer Paul Beeber, President, New York State Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation.
Fagin, award-wining
environmental reporter and Director of New York University’s Science, Health and
Environmental Reporting Program, writes, “There is no universally accepted
optimal level for daily intake of fluoride.” Some researchers even wonder
whether the 1 mg/L added into drinking water is too much, reports
Fagin.
After 3 years of
scrutinizing hundreds of studies, a National Research Council (NRC) committee
“concluded that fluoride can subtly alter endocrine function, especially in the
thyroid – the gland that produces hormones regulating growth and metabolism,”
reports Fagin.
Fagin quotes John
Doull, professor emeritus of pharmacology and toxicology at the University of
Kansas Medical Center, who chaired the NRC committee thusly, “The thyroid
changes do worry me.”
Fluoride in foods,
beverages, medicines and dental products can result in fluoride
over-consumption, visible in young children as dental fluorosis – white spotted,
yellow, brown and/or pitted teeth. We can’t normally see fluoride’s effects to
the rest of the body.
Reports Fagin, “a
series of epidemiological studies in China have associated high fluoride
exposures with lower IQ.”
“(E)pidemiological
studies and tests on lab animals suggest that high fluoride exposure increases
the risk of bone fracture, especially in vulnerable populations such as the
elderly and diabetics,” writes Fagin.
Fagin interviewed
Steven Levy, director of the Iowa Fluoride Study which tracked about 700
Iowa children
for sixteen years. Nine-year-old “Iowa children who lived in communities where
the water was fluoridated were 50 percent more likely to have mild fluorosis…
than [nine-year-old] children living in nonfluoridated areas of the state,”
writes Fagin. Levy will study fluoride’s effects on their bones.
Over 1300
professionals urge Congress to cease water fluoridation and conduct
Congressional hearings because scientific evidence indicates fluoridation is
ineffective and has serious health risks. Support them; write your
representative here:
<link>
(or http://www.FluorideAction.Net )
“(G)enetic,
environmental and even cultural factors appear to leave some people much more
susceptible to the effects of fluoride,” writes Fagin
“What the [NRC]
committee found is that we’ve gone with the status quo regarding fluoride … for
too long… and now we need to take a fresh look,” Doull says, “ In the scientific
community, people tend to think that its settled… 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. I think that’s why fluoridation is still being
challenged so many years after it began, In the face of ignorance, controversy
is rampant.”