The Ecologist
Year 1986, Volume 16, Pages 237-242
Fluoride: New Grounds for Concern
By Mark Diesendorf and Philip R.N. Sutton
The intake of fluorides,
salts of the element fluorine, has increased markedly over the past
quarter century. Fluorides are added to a number of consumer products,
such as toothpastes, mouth-rinses and gels, in order to try to reduce
tooth decay in children. Moreover, fluoridation, the addition of
fIuorides to town water supplies, contributes to human fluoride
intake a considerable involuntary component, a large part of which
is derived from foods processed in, and drinks reconstituted with,
fluoridated water.
Even very low levels of fluoride in water and air are damaging to
certain species of plants. High doses are well known to be poisonous
to animals and humans-indeed, sodium fluoride is used as a rat poison.
How safe are fluoride products and fluoridation for people? Are
they really as beneficial for children's teeth as dental and medical
associations in extensively fluoridated countries, such as Britain
(10 per cent fluoridated), the USA (50 per cent) and Australia (67
per cent) claim? Should people be, in effect, compelled to drink
fluoridated water? Who profits from the marketing of products which
are supposed to reduce tooth decay, even though children continue
to eat junk food? Fluoridation, and the marketing of other fluoride
products, raise scientific controversies, unresolved ethical issues
and political questions. They are matters worthy of serious scrutiny.
On the world scene, there are considerable divisions of opinion.
In continental western Europe, fluoridation was introduced beyond
the pilot plant stage only in Sweden, the Netherlands and West Germany.
In each of these countries, after trials lasting many years, it
has been terminated on health and/or ethical grounds. In contrast,
Australia, is one of the most extensively fluoridated countries
in the world. In some circles in Australia, those who question fluoridation
are branded as "ignorant cranks".
Nevertheless, in this article, we attempt to draw attention to scientific
evidence, published in international journals over the past five
years, which indicates new grounds for concern about potential health
hazards from low doses of fluorides. We also explain why the claims
that fluoridation is responsible for the substantial reductions
in tooth decay observed in developed countries, are being examined
with growing scepticism by scientists.
On the question of risks, some dental and medical authorities have
somehow managed to convey the incorrect impression that, apart from
strengthening teeth, fluoride is inert in the human body and is
therefore harmless. The biochemistry and physiology of fluoride
in the human body contradict this notion. Not only is fluoride incorporated
into teeth, but also into bone and many soft tissues. On account
of its small size, the fluoride ion is very active biochemically,
possibly only exceeded in activity by the hydrogen ion. It is therefore
not surprising that a wide range of adverse effects on biological
systems and on human health have been reported in the scientific
literature. We first draw attention to a group of people who may
be at particularly high risk.
Bottle-fed Infants
Infants who are fed with milk formulae prepared with fluoridated
water take in about 100 times the amount of fluoride which they
would receive from breast milk. This is because there is a kind
of physiological "barrier" which largely prevents fluoride
from entering breast milk, even when the mother is on a relatively
high fluoride diet. This barrier could have evolved to protect the
developing infant in environments which have naturally higher than
average fluoride levels. It is widely accepted by nutritionists
that breast milk contains the optimum amounts of all nutrients required
for the proper development of the infant, at least for the first
few months after birth. One wonders what the massive unnatural overdose
of fluoride is doing to bottle-fed infants, particularly since it
is now known that breast-fed infants remove fluoride from their
bones and excrete more fluoride than they ingest.
Genetic Damage
Genetic effects are inherited effects. They are known to be produced
by quite a large number of chemicals in the environment and by ionising
radiation. In the 1970s, several scientific papers reported that
fluoride causes genetic damage to some plants and animals, and to
animal cells grown in tissue culture on suitable nutrients in the
laboratory. At that time there were some contradictory reports and
the situation was unclear.
However, since 1980 several scientific papers have been published
in major international journals showing clearly that, under certain
conditions, fluoride damages the DNA molecule, hence the primary
genetic material which contains the genes.
In particular, a group at the Nippon Dental University in Tokyo
has shown that fluoride disrupts the DNA in cells taken from the
human mouth and from the human foreskin, and grown in tissue culture.
Although the fluoride concentrations used in these experiments were
much greater than that recommended by the pro-fluoridation dental
associations for fluoridated water (about 1 mg fluoride per litre
of water), the concentrations were comparable with those existing
in people's mouths, following teeth cleaning with fluoridated toothpaste,
mouth rinsing with a fluoridated rinse, or application of a fluoridated
gel to the teeth.
The observation of genetic damage raises the question as to whether
consumers should continue to use these fluoridated products. It
also suggests the possibility that using fluoridated water may produce
genetic effects; to elucidate this, more experiments are needed
at lower fluoride concentrations. It should be noted that some genetic
effects, such as changes in mitosis and DNA synthesis in cell cultures,
have been reported at fluoride concentrations as low as 1.5mg/litre.
Cancer?
Chemicals which are mutagenic are also often, though not
always, capable of inducing cancer in humans. Some of the experiments
mentioned in the previous section provide strong evidence that fluoride
is a mutagen. But is it also a human carcinogen?
So far, epidemiological studies do not seem to have established
a higher cancer mortality rate in general in fluoridated cities
compared with unfluoridated cities. However, it should be borne
in mind that epidemiological studies generally contain a number
of untested assumptions, such as the selection of data and procedures
for analysing that data, and so a clear-cut answer cannot be given
at this stage. If there is a cancer risk, it is possible that it
mainly occurs at the higher levels of fluoride exposure corresponding
to the use of toothpastes, gels and mouth-washes.
Nevertheless there are genuine grounds for concern. Experiments
carried out in 1984 indicate that at least one type of mammalian
cell, grown in fluoride-treated culture, induces tumours when injected
back into the living mammal. Untreated cells do not have this effect.
While there is still a big gap between the result of this kind of
experiment and the direct induction or the acceleration of the development
of cancer by fluoride in humans, the evidence remains worrying.
Enzyme Inhibition
Enzymes are proteins which act like catalysts to facilitate and
control chemical reactions in living creatures. For many years,
it has been known that fluoride interferes with the action of a
number of enzymes in the human body. The health implications of
these changes are still unknown, but the possible damage is profound
and diverse.
One of the main research advances in this area in the 1980s has
been to shed light on the mechanism by which fluoride inhibits enzymes.
Fluoride can interfere with an important chemical bond, known as
the hydrogen bond. This results in changes in the shape of enzyme
molecules, effecting their ability to fulfill their functions. With
regard to DNA, which is like a spiral staircase consisting of two
bannisters held together with hydrogen bonded steps, fluoride, by
affecting those hydrogen bonds, can completely disrupt the molecule,
readily accounting for the genetic damage mentioned earlier.
Well-known Health Hazards
Prior to 1980, evidence for the existence of a number of other ill
effects from ingesting fluoridated water, fluoride toothpaste and
tablets was reported in the scientific literature but ignored or
denigrated by the promoters of fluoridation. We mention here only
those hazards which are well documented. However, these could be
just the tip of the iceberg. The problem is that Australian, British
and USA doctors are incorrectly led to believe by their professional
associations that there are no adverse effects from fluoridation
and the use of fluoride containing products, apart from the mottling
of teeth. Even this effect is stated to be so slight that it can
be detected only by experts.
Dental fluorosis
Dental fluorosis (mottling of teeth) is not just a "cosmetic"
problem. Amongst fluoride researchers, it has been recognised for
many years as the first visible sign of chronic fluoride poisoning.
It used to be considered that mottled teeth would occur in about
10 per cent of children who drank water with fluoride concentrations
at or near the level recommended by fluoridation promoters. Recently,
evidence has been published that this percentage gas risen substantially
in some fluoridated areas, such as Auckland, New Zealand, where
about one quarter of the children are affected. A contributing reason
for this increase must be the substantial increase in the fluoride
dose which is now ingested from numerous sources by many populations
(see below).
Skeletal fluorosis
A bone disease called skeletal fluorosis is prevalent in several
parts of the world (e.g. India, Qatar and Japan) where drinking
water naturally contains fluoride in concentrations equal to or
slightly above that recommended for fluoridation. Skeletal fluorosis
involves changes in the bone structure which are generally detectable
on x-rays. Extreme cases (such as those often seen in India) have
readily visible symptoms and include crippling of those affected.
These extreme forms have not been reported in Australia, probably
because other factors are important, such as nutrition which may
be inadequate in those with symptoms. It is now increasingly recognised
that the nutrition of many Britons, Americans and Australians falls
far short of being adequate. To date no scientific study has been
carried out in those countries to identify the extent of skeletal
fluorosis.
Haemodialysis
In the 1970s, several major overseas hospitals, such as the Mayo
Clinic, Ottawa General Hospital and Montreal General Hospital, reported
cases of serious bone diseases in patients undergoing long-term
treatment on kidney machines which used fluoridated water. Nowadays,
many (but not all) kidney machines have a "filter" to
remove fluoride from the water.
Intolerance to Fluoride
In a small fraction of people, fluoridated water, fluoride toothpaste
and fluoride tablets produce a variety of intolerance effects, including
skin eruptions, headaches, 10 gastric upsets, headaches increased
desire to urinate and, in the case of toothpaste, mouth ulcers.
All of these effects have been re ported by clinicians in the medical
literature. Some have been confirmed by a "blind" and
a "double blind" controlled trial.
Fluoride Dose
The fluoridation of water supplies is called "controlled fluoridation"
by proponents because the aim often not achieved-is to add fluoride
to town water supplies at a fixed concentration: namely, about 1
mg of fluoride per litre of water in temperate climates. However,
the term "controlled" is misleading because the individual
dose of fluoride depends not only on the concentration in the water
but also on how much water (and tea, beer, soft drink, reconstituted
fruit juice, etc), people drink, and on how much food processed
with fluoridated water they eat.
As recently as 1971, leading proponents of fluoridation from the
dental profession and even the US National Academy of Sciences stated
that the total average daily intake of fluoride from fluoridated
water, from both direct and indirect pathways, was only about 1
mg for an adult. These authorities seemed unaware that measurements
had already been made on sedentary people yielding daily intakes
of 2 to 5.5 mg. In manual labourers, these intakes may be doubled.
To these figures must be added the intake from atmospheric pollution
and from natural sources (e.g. strong tea made with water originally
having a negligible fluoride content contains about 2 mg per litre)
and consumer products (e.g. dentrifices and some medical drugs).
Recent studies have shown that young children (ages 2-6) swallow
about one-third of the toothpaste applied to the brush, producing
a substantial peak in the fluoride concentration in the blood plasma.
Since the concentration of fluoride in toothpaste is about 0.1 per
cent, daily doses of fluoride of 0.5mg from toothpaste are likely.
We believe that the current practice of marketing fruit flavoured
fluoride toothpaste is dangerous. A single 75gm tube contains about
75mg of fluoride. There is no doubt that this is a toxic dose, which
could even be fatal for some children. How is it that our medical
and dental authorities have allowed fruit-flavoured fluoride toothpaste
onto the market without making a public protest? The answer, we
suggest, lies in the close relationship between some of these authorities
and commercial interests, and in the perceived requirement not to
shake public confidence in the safety of fluoride, even to the extent
of suppressing information about its well-recognised dangers.
In heavily fluoridated countries such as Australia, it is not uncommon
for children to receive fluoride not only directly and indirectly
from the water supply and from natural sources, but also from atmospheric
fluoride pollution, fluoride tablets, toothpaste, mouthrinses and
gels (about 1 per cent fluoride). In our experience, when medical
and dental authorities campaign for the fluoridation of a town water
supply in Australia, they make no serious attempt to assess the
total fluoride intake which citizens may already be receiving.
For instance, although the Australian city of Geelong had two major
sources of industrial fluoride pollution of the atmosphere, the
Health Department of Victoria in a recent letter to the Geelong
Water Trust admitted that it had not determined the fluoride levels
in the population of any Victorian town before advocating fluoridation.
The Department had, therefore, disregarded the resolution of the
World Health Organisation which specified that fluoride intake from
other sources must be taken into account when considering the introduction
of fluoridation.
Readers may be surprised to learn that there is no official "safe"
daily dose of fluoride expressed in mg per kg of body weight per
day. Dentists and state authorities seem to think only in terms
of fluoride concentrations (in mg per litre) in the water supply
which, as the volume drunk is not considered, bear little relation
to doses ingested by individuals. For the one ill effect of fluoridation
which is generally conceded even by proponents, dental fluorosis,
we cannot find even one study of its dependence on dose. This is
just one indication of the inadequacy of the research done to back
up claims for the safety of fluoridation and fluoride products.
The incomplete data available suggest that the total daily fluoride
dose in fluoridated areas is likely to average at least several
mg and, for physically active people, could be over 10mg. For comparison,
the controlled trials in which intolerance reactions to fluoride
were observed, delivered just 1mg of fluoride per day. Even the
profluoridation British Royal College of Physicians admits that
some patients, when given as little as 9mg per day fluoride in tablets,
with the aim of treating osteoporosis, experience nausea, gastric
upset and sometimes vomiting. Clearly, if there is a margin for
safety for the "average" person, it must be very small.
Because of human variability and because of the lack of a controlled
dose, it is inevitable that for some individuals there can be no
margin of safety.
Nearly 30 years ago, B.C. Nesin, the Director of Laboratories of
the New York Water Supply, said that the minimum safety factor is
10mg for substances which are admitted to a water supply, and that
such a factor cannot be established with fluoridation at 1mg per
litre. He added: "It must be concluded that the fluoridation
of public water supplies is a hazardous procedure, people are bound
to get hurt, it remains to find out how many and when."
Enormous Benefits?
Claims that fluoridation "reduces dental caries (tooth decay)
by about 60 per cent" are based on studies, "trials",
or "demonstrations" on various populations.
The earliest studies were those performed by H.T. Dean and colleagues
in naturally fluoridated regions of the USA. It is claimed that
these studies demonstrate a reduction in tooth decay proportional
to the concentration of fluoride in the water supply. Unfortunately,
from a scientific perspective, the fact that these studies were
qualitative rather than quantitative in nature, the non-random method
of selecting data and the high sensitivity of the results to the
way in which the study populations were grouped, all show that no
firm conclusions can be drawn from these early studies. Indeed,
Ziegelbecker, a mathematician, analysed a much larger data set which
included that considered by Dean and could not find any relationship
between fluoride concentration in drinking water and tooth decay.
The next set of studies, which were used to justify the extensive
fluoridation programme in the USA (and subsequently in Australia),
took place in several artificially fluoridated towns in North America.
These "demonstrations" have been criticised rigorously
in a book by Sutton, on the grounds of inadequate experimental design
and inadequate statistical analysis. Sutton's critique is generally
not cited in the pro-fluoridation literature, despite the fact that
it has never been refuted.
Notwithstanding the poor scientific status of the above-mentioned
studies in both naturally and artificially fluoridated regions,
these studies are still cited as the basis for fluoridation in many
pro-fluoridation reviews and reports, including the 1976 report
of the British Royal College of Physicians.
"Demonstrations" of the alleged benefits of fluoridation
have been performed in several other countries. A few of these,
such as some of the early studies in Britain, were better designed
experimentally, to the extent that they had unfluoridated control
populations and the dental examiners did not know which children
came from the control population and which came from the fluoridated
test region. (This elementary precaution against bias was not taken
in the North American trials.) The selected data from these studies
published by the UK Department of Health in 1969 suggested a modest
contribution from fluoridation: a reduction in tooth decay of about
one cavity per child in fluoridated regions compared with unfluoridated
controls of the same age. However, the rate of increase in tooth
decay with age was the same in both fluoridated and control cities.
A possible interpretation of the data is that there is a delay of
1-2 years in the onset of tooth decay in the fluoridated cities.
The vast majority of the fluoridation "demonstrations"
have been no better in scientific standard than the North American
ones. Some have even been worse. For instance, none of the Australian
studies on permanent teeth had a genuine control population. Moreover,
it appears that only one study had adequate baseline data that is,
a series of examinations of tooth decay over several years before
a population is fluoridated.
It is important to have a control population and to have sufficient
baseline data to obtain the time trend in tooth decay before fluoridation
so as to find out whether the observed reduction in tooth decay
over a period of years is caused by fluoridation or by other environment
and lifestyle factors.
There is now growing evidence that tooth decay has greatly decreased
in a number of developed countries in both fluoridated and unfluoridated
regions. For example, in Sydney, Australia, the Health Commission
of New South Wales has reported that the proportion of children
with "decay-free" teeth increased from 8 per cent in 1961
to 58 per cent in 1967. However, Sydney was only fluoridated in
1968, and the Health Commission has not published any evidence to
support the notion that fluoride tablets and fluoride toothpaste
were widely used in Sydney in the above period.
Furthermore, the maximum possible benefit (if any) from fluoridation
would surely be achieved for children who have consumed fluoridated
water from birth. Yet there is a growing body of evidence which
suggests that such "optimally exposed" children have much
less tooth decay today than "optimally exposed" children
of the same age several years ago.
So it is likely that fluoridation plays a minor role in reducing
tooth decay. By pushing strongly to achieve total fluoridation in
Britain, the USA and Australia, the promoters are in effect destroying
scientific evidence which is unfavourable to their policies.
Misleading Statements
It is not often that State and Commonwealth Departments of Health,
and a leading consumers' organisation, publish information which
is misleading and, "in some cases, demonstrably false. Unfortunately,
this has been the situation with regard to the issue of fluoridation.
Two examples of such publications are:-
1. The anonymous article originally published in the USA magazine,
Consumer Reports, and reprinted verbatim in the August
1979 issue of the Australian consumers' magazine, Choice;
2. The introduction to the 1978-79 Annual Report of the Australian
Director-General of Health.
A complete analysis of the misleading information in these two articles
would require a whole paper in itself. Yet it is important to try
and set the record straight. Therefore, we shall mention only some
of the basic misleading terminology in these and other profluoridation
articles, and give just one example of a false statement.
The Choice article implies wrongly that fluoride has been
shown to be an "essential nutrient". However, fluoride,
at the levels recommended by pro-fluoridation dental associations,
is neither "necessary" nor "sufficient" for
sound teeth. In other words, people can have sound teeth without
fluoridated water, toothpaste, or tablets and people can have very
decayed teeth even though they use all the fluoride paraphernalia.
The quality of your teeth depends on a broader range of factors
than the presence of virtual absence of fluoride. But, are traces
of fluoride, much smaller than those considered above, necessary
for life? This has never been established scientifically. Indeed,
in 1979, the USA Food and Drug Administration ceased listing fluorine
as "essential or probably essential" in human nutrition.
In any case, the question of the essentiality of fluorine is irrelevant
to the issue of fluoridation and the use of fluoridated products,
because minute traces of fluoride are always present naturally in
the diet.
The Australian Director-General of Health referred to a "deficiency
of fluoride", but there cannot be any such condition. How can
there be a deficiency of something which is not even necessary?
The use of the above misleading terminology - "controlled fluoridation",
"essential nutrient" and "deficiency of fluoride"-by
the promoters of fluoridation and fluoride products is not the language
of science but rather that of advertising and public relations masquerading
as science.
An example of a statement in the Choice article which is
factually false, rather than just misleading, occurs in the section
headed "Claim: fluoride is a poison". In speaking of chronic
fluoride toxicity in India (where skeletal fluorosis is a major
manifestation of such toxicity), a paragraph in this section creates
the false impression that such ill effects "are associated
with water supplies that contain at least 10ppm of natural fluoride".
In fact, in India a number of cases of skeletal fluorosis 242 have
been found in several regions where water supplies contain concentrations
around 1ppm (1mg per litre). Indeed, it is for this reason that
the Indian scientist, S.G. Srikantia, has recommended that the upper
limit for fluoride in drinking water be set around 0.5ppm.
The existence of many uncorrected false and misleading statements
in apparently authoritative articles promoting fluoridation can
be understood in the light of our experience that until the 1980s
it was almost impossible to publish or broadcast articles, letters
and radio talks which raised awkward questions about fluoridation.
Such was the power and influence of the profluoride lobby. In fact
very few fluoridation proponents have actually studied the original
scientific literature. Organisations which have endorsed fluoridation
have done so on faith, relying on the opinions of a small core of
active promoters, not on the basis of a detailed study of the issue.
Who profits from
Fluoridation
Fluoride is promoted as a kind of "magic bullet"
which is supposed to prevent tooth decay harmlessly whatever
junk food children may eat. Clearly the promotion of fluoridation
and other fluoride products assists the manufacturers of
foods containing large amounts of sugar and other refined
carbohydrates to prosper.
One of the principal fluoridation-promoting bodies in Australia,
the Dental Health Education and Research Foundation (DHERF),
is associated with the University of Sydney. The 1979 Annual
Report of the DHERF contained a list of financial donors,
the "Honour role of contributors". These included
the Coca Cola Export Corporation, the Wrigley Co., the Australian
Council of Soft Drink Manufacturers, the Colonial Sugar
Refining Co., Arnotts Biscuits, Cadbury Schweppes, Kelloggs
and Scanlens Sweets.
From the DHERF's total expenditure of $199,000 (Australian
dollars) in 1979, $43,000 was explicitly designated for
"Fluoridation promotion". Out of $97,000 designated
for "Research and educational programmes" and
"Publications and films" a large part was also
devoted to fluoridation. The promotion of good nutrition
including the avoidance of sugary foods, appears to play
a very minor role in DHERF's educational and research programmes.
Yet it is just these foods, not a so-called "fluoride
deficiency' ', which comprise the principal cause of tooth
decay.
Another likely beneficiary of the public health image of
fluoride is the aluminium industry, which funded some of
the early American research on the alleged relationship
between tooth decay and the natural levels of fluoride in
town water supplies. Subsequently the industry advertised
its fluoride for use in water fluoridation programmes in
the USA. However, the indirect financial gains to the industry
from fluoridation may be considerably greater than those
from selling the fluoride. Indeed, it is only in the past
six years or so that discussion of fluoride pollution from
aluminium. smelters has started to become respectable"
in Australia.
Not that this is a deliberate conspiracy between dentists
and big business. Most people have the best of motives,
and there is no reason to question that bodies such as the
DHERF and their donors wish to improve children's teeth.
It is sufficient to identify the links between elite dental
researchers on one hand and the sugary food and aluminium
industries on the other, and to point out that the dental
researchers may be in a position of inadvertent conflict
of interest. The existence of innocent participants does
not weaken the hypothesis that the primary pressure for
fluoridation originates from the sugary food and aluminium
industries. Dentists and to a lesser extent doctors and
health administrators play the role of unwitting "cadres"
who perform both the research and the promotional campaigns
for fluoridation. These activities are funded in part from
the additional profits which fluoridation brings to the
primary pressure groups.
Mark Diesendorf and Philip R.N. Sutton |
Bibliographny
General scientific reviews of the main known health hazards of fluoridation,
as understood in the late 1970s, have been given by G.L. Waldbott,
AW. Burgstahler and H.L. McKinney (1978): Fluoridation: the great
dilemma. Lawrence, Kansas USA: Coronado Press, 423pp; Philip R.N.
Sutton (1980): Fluoridation 1979: Scientific criticisms and fluoride
dangers. 285pp, (now out of print but available in libraries); and
Mark Diesendorf (1980): "Is there a scientific basis for fluoridation?"
Community Health Studies vol. 4, no. 3, 224-230.
D. Rose and J.R. Marier (1977): Environmental fluoride, 1977. National
Research Council of Canada, Report No. NRCC 16081.
Glen S.R. Walker (1982); Fluoridation-poison on tap. Glen Walker
(GPO Box 935G, Melbourne Vic. 3001) 458pp.
Papers relevant to the overdosing of bottlefed infants with fluoride
are:
R.D. Gabovich and G.D. Ovrutskiy (1977): "Fluorine in stornatology
and hygiene". Translated from the 1969 Russian edition by the
National Institute of Dental Research, DHEW Publication No. (NIH)
78-785, USA Dept of Health, Education & Welfare, Bethesda, pp.171-172;
J. Ekstrand et al. (1981): Br Med J vol. 283, 761-762;
S. Esala et al. (1982): Br J Nutr vol. 48, 201-204.
On genetic damage in cell cultures, see
T. Tsutsui et al. (1984): Mutation Research vol. 139, 193-198 and
vol. 140, 43-48.
On tumours induced in animals by fluoridated tissue cultures, see
T. Tsutsui et al. (1984): Cancer Research vol. 44, 938-941.
On the disruption of the hydrogen bond of fluoride, see
John Emsley et al. (1982): J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun. No. 9, 476-478;
S.L. Edwards et al. (1984): J. Biol, Chem. vol. 259, 12984-12988.
For an example of enzyme inhibition by low doses of fluoride in
vivo, see
D.B. Ferguson (1971): Nature New Biology vol. 231, 159-160.
Studies on fluoridated toothpaste and gels swallowed by children
are reported in
Jan Ekstrand et al. (1980): Caries Res. vol. 14, 96-102; (1980):
J. Dental Res. vol. 59, 1067.
Reports of skeletal fluorosis from water supplies in India with
fluoride concentrations around lmg/litre, have been published by
A. Singh, S.S. Jolly and B.C. Bansal (1961): Lancet
i, 197-200; S.S. Jolly et al. (1973): Fluoride vol. 6, 4-18;
S.G. Srikantia (1984): Bull. Nutrition Foundation India, April.
For reports on skeletal fluorosis in Qatar and Japan, respectively,
at fluoride concentrations around 1mg/litre, see:
H.A. Azar et al. (1961): Ann Int Med vol. 55, 193-200 and
Y ' Hirata (1950): Tokyo Ito Shinshi vol. 67, 9-14, quoted by G.
Minoguchi (1970) in World Health Organisation: "Fluo~rides
and human health", Geneva.
Critiques of "demonstrations" of the alleged benefits
of fluoridation are:
Philip R.N. Sutton (1960): "Fluoridation: errors and omissions
in experimental trials." 2nd ed. Melbourne University Press;
R. Ziegelbecker (1981): Fluoride vol. 14, 123-128.
The reduction in tooth decay in unfluoridated regions has been reviewed
by
D.H. Leverett (1982): Science vol. 217, 26-30. The reduction in
tooth decay in pre-fluoridation Sydney was revealed in
J.S. Lawson et al. (1978): Med J. Aust. vol. 1, 124-125.
For an account of the struggles of an eminent USA allergist against
the suppression by medical, dental and public health authorities
of his clinical observations of intolerance reactions to fluoride,
see
G.L. Waldbott (1965): A struggle with titans. New York, Carlton
Press.
For an excellent analysis of the politics of fluoridation in Australia
(i.e. who controls, who funds and who profits), see the forthcoming
book by Wendy Varney: Fluoridation-a case to answer. Hale and Iremonger
(in press). See also Waldbott et al (1978), op. cit. chap. 17.
Mark Diesendorf BSc PhD,
a principal research scientist in the CSIRO Division of
Mathematics and Statistics, Canberra, is currently setting up a
private consultancy, Science in the Public Interest, Australia.
He is president of the Australasian Wind Energy Association.
Philip R.N. Sutton DDSc FRACDS was appointed senior
lecturer in Dental Science in 1963 at the University of Melbourne's
School of Dental Science, but resigned in 1974 to have more time
to extend his studies on dental conditions in Polynesia and Micronesia.
In 1959, Melbourne University Press published the first edition
of his monograph, "Fluoridation: Errors and Omissions in Experimental
Trials", which he updated in 1980 |