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MEDICAL TRIBUNE:
Fluoride Report Softened
DIRECTORY: Health
/ EPA Standards
/ News
Articles / Medical Tribune 1989
[See photocopy of article]
MEDICAL TRIBUNE
April 27, 1989
Fluoride Report Softened
by Joel Griffiths
In his opening remarks to the U.S. Surgeon
General's ad-hoc committee on the health effects of fluoride,
Robert Mecklenburgh, D.D.S., then Chief Dental Officer, U.S. Public
Health Service, stated: "There isn't any group in the U.S.
better qualified to come up with a recommendation than the group
that is around this table today. It would be hard to refute or overwhelm
what this committee in its judgement decides."
Indeed, it did require a group with equally high qualifications
to refute and overwhelm the committee's decisions - namely, the
committee itself. Between the draft report that was circulated among
members for review and the final report that was presented to the
Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, M.D., the committee's most significant
conclusions and recommendations were eviscerated.
For example, the draft
report stated: "The committee concluded that the fluoride
content of drinking water should be [emphasis added] no
greater than . . . 1.4-2.4 ppm for children up to and including
age 9 ... because of a lack of information regarding fluoride effect
on the skeleton in children (to age 9) over 3 ppm, and potential
cardiotoxic effects at that level." (Ingested fluoride forms
calcified deposits in the aorta, the report noted.) As for dental
fluorosis, "There was a consensus that mottling or pitting
of teeth could represent as yet unknown skeletal effects in children
and that severe dental fluorosis per se constitutes an adverse health
effect that should be prevented." Additionally, the draft noted
that "there was some sentiment (especially among the pediatricians)
in the committee that the age limit for children ... should be as
high as 18 years because of continued rapid bone development between
ages 8 and 18."
This draft version accurately reflects the votes and conclusions
of the committee, as documented in the transcript
of its meeting. But in the final
report that was sent to the Surgeon General, the recommendation
has been changed to read: "It is inadvisable [emphasis
added] for the fluoride content of drinking water to be greater
than ... 1.4-2.4 ppm for children up to age 9." This phrasing
made the recommendation optional.
Moreover, the only reason given in the final report for even suggesting
a lower level for children was "in order to avoid the uncosmetic
[emphasis added] effects of dental fluorosis." Vanished
from the conclusions were the committee's concerns about skeletal
and cardiotoxic effects over 3 ppm, its consensus that dental fluorosis
was an adverse health effect, and the sentiment for a higher cutoff
age.
In their place was this statement: "There exists no directly
applicable scientific documentation of adverse medical effects at
levels of fluoride below 8 mg/l (ppm). Therefore, it can be concluded
that four times optimum in U.S. drinking water supplies [2.4-4.8
ppm] is a level that would provide 'no known or anticipated adverse
effect with a margin of safety.'"
The committee chairman, Jay R. Shapiro, M.D., declined to comment
on these disparities.
In a January 1984 letter to the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA, which had requested the review). Surgeon
General Koop set forth his summary conclusions based on the committee's
final report: "My [1982] recommendations about the advisability
of limiting fluoride concentrations to twice the optimum [1.4-2.4
ppm] in order to avoid unsightly dental fluorosis still pertain.
At the same time, based on current scientific evidence, there is
essentially no likelihood of even non-adverse medical effects where
drinking water supplies contain up to four times the optimum [2.4-4.8
ppm] concentration of fluoride."
These two sentences constituted the sole residual force of the
committee's original recommendations and conclusions. Subsequently,
EPA raised the permissible level
of fluoride in drinking water to 4 ppm for all members of the population,
according to Joseph Cotruvo, Ph.D., director of the Criteria and
Standards Division, Office of Drinking Water, EPA.
See also:
Fluoride's Revenge
- The Progressive, January 1990
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