NOTE: To read an interview with Dr. Phyllis Mullenix, click
here
The following is an excerpt from "Did Government Approve
Citizens as Toxic Waste Sites?" (The WINDS, 1998). To read
the full article, click
here
The Dark Odyssey of Dr. Phyllis Mullenix
While conducting interviews and gathering the data contained in
this writing, this office was repeatedly referred by EPA scientists,
university professors and physicians to Dr. Mullenix's research
at the Forsyth Dental Institute as a primary and seminal source
of reliable scientific research on fluoride toxicity.
The Forsyth Dental Center is a highly respected research institution
established in 1910 for the purpose of providingfree dental care
for the children of Boston. It is the largest and, considered by
many, the most highly respected dental research institution in the
world. All Harvard dental students are required to take a portion
of their training at Forsyth.
It is interesting to note that the, then, director of the institute,
Dr. Jack Hein, who was responsible for her assignment to fluoride
toxicology studies was, according to Mullenix, instrumental in some
of the original research that led to the introduction of fluoride
into toothpaste while he was working for Colgate.
"I wasn't too excited about studying fluoride," Mullenix
told this reporter, "because, quite frankly, it was 'good for
your teeth' and all that, and I thought the studies would be basically
just another control and I had no interest in fluoride." However,
because it was part of what she was hired to do, she said, and because
she had just astounded the institute by achieving the unattainable--securing
a grant from the National Cancer Institute to study the neurotoxicity
of the treatments used for childhood leukemia--she decided to incorporate
the fluoride studies into that research milieu. In fact, Mullenix
claimed, "I was in the top four per cent in the country"
for such funding. "The institute was tickled pink, but I really
had no idea what a quagmire I was getting into."
For her toxicology studies Dr. Mullenix designed a computer pattern
recognition system that has been described by other scientists as
nothing short of elegant in its ability to study fluoride's effects
on the neuromotor functions of rats.
"By about 1990 I had gathered enough data from the test and
control animals," Mullenix continues, "to realize that
fluoride doesn't look clean." When she reviewed that data she
realized that something was seriously affecting her test animals.
They had all (except the control group) been administered doses
of fluoride sufficient to bring their blood levels up to the same
as those that had caused dental fluorosis [a brittleness and staining
of the teeth] in thousands of children. Up to this point, Mullenix
explained, fluorosis was widely thought to be the only effect of
excessive fluoridation.
The scientist's first hint that she may not be navigating friendly
waters came when she was ordered to present her findings to the
National Institute of Dental Research (NIDR) [a division of NIH,
the National Institute of Health]. "That's when the 'fun' started,"
she said, "I had no idea what I was getting into. I walked
into the main corridors there and all over the walls was 'The Miracle
of Fluoride'. That was my first real kick-in-the-pants as to what
was actually going on." The NIH display, she said, actually
made fun of and ridiculed those that were against fluoridation.
"I thought, 'Oh great!' Here's the main NIH hospital talking
about the 'Miracle of Fluoride' and I'm giving a seminar to the
NIDR telling them that fluoride is neurotoxic!"
What Dr. Mullenix presented at the seminar that, in reality, sounded
the death knell of her career was that:
"The fluoride pattern of behavioral problems matches up with
the same results of administering radiation and chemotherapy [to
cancer patients]. All of these really nasty treatments that are
used clinically in cancer therapy are well known to cause I.Q. deficits
in children. That's one of the best studied effects they know of.
The behavioral pattern that results from the use of fluoride matches
that produced by cancer treatment that causes a reduction in intelligence."
At a meeting with dental industry representatives immediately
following her presentation, Mullenix was bluntly asked if she was
saying that their company's products were lowering the I.Q. of children?
"And I told them, 'basically, yes.'"
The documents obtained by authors Griffiths and Bryson seem to
add yet another voice of corroboration to the reduced intelligence
effects of fluoride. "New epidemiological evidence from China
adds support," the writers claim, "showing a correlation
between low dose fluoride exposure and diminished I.Q. in children."
Then in 1994, after refining her research and findings, Dr. Mullenix
presented her results to the Journal of Neurotoxicology and Teratology
[5], considered probably the world's most respected publication
in that field. Three days after she joyfully announced to the Forsyth
Institute that she had been accepted for publication by the journal,
she was dismissed from her position. What followed was a complete
evaporation of all grants and funding for any of Mullenix's research.
What that means in the left-brain world of scientific research,
which is fueled by grants of government and corporate capital, is
the equivalent to an academic burial. Her letter of dismissal from
the Forsyth Institute stated as their reason for that action that
her work was not "dentally related." [Fluoride research--not
dentally related?] The institute's director stated, according to
Mullenix, "they didn't consider the safety or the toxicity
of fluoride as being their kind of science." Of course, a logical
question begs itself at this last statement: why was Dr. Mullenix
assigned the study of fluoride toxicity in the first place if it
was not "their kind of science"?...
Almost immediately following her dismissal, Dr. Mullenix said,
the Forsyth Institute received a quarter-million dollar grant from
the Colgate company. Coincidence or reward?
Her findings clearly detailed the developmental effects of fluoride,
pre- and postnatal. Doses administered before birth produced marked
hyperactivity in offspring. Postnatal administration caused the
infant rats to exhibit what Dr. Mullenix calls the "couch potato
syndrome"--a malaise or absence of initiative and activity.
One need only observe the numerous children being dosed with Ritalin
as treatment for their hyperactivity to draw logical correlations...
Dr. Mullenix was then given an unfunded research position at Children's
Hospital in Boston, but with no equipment and no money--what for?
"The people at Children's Hospital, for heaven's sake, came
right out and said they were scared because they knew how important
the fluoride issue was," Mullenix said. "Even at Forsyth
they told me I was endangering funds for the institution if I published
that information." It has become clear to such as Dr. Mullenix
et al, that money, not truth, drives science--even at the expense
of the health and lives of the nation's citizens.
EXCERPT FROM: "Fear of Fluoride", Salon Magazine,
February 1999 (See
full article)
At Harvard, Dr. Phyllis Mullenix says she lost her job at the Forsyth
Research Institute, which specializes in dental issues, in 1994,
after she insisted on publishing research results in the scholarly
journal Neurotoxicology and Teratology showing that fluoride adversely
affected brain function. By then, Mullenix had spent 12 years at
Forsyth's toxicology department, 11 of them as department chairwoman;
she was highly regarded for her previous research demonstrating
how exposure to lead and radiation lowered children's IQ levels.
"To be honest, I thought studying fluoride would be a waste
of time," says Mullenix. "I mean, it's in the water supply,
so it's got to be safe, right?" But Mullenix's research found
that rats who experienced prenatal exposure to fluoride exhibited
higher levels of hyperactivity, while rats with postnatal exposure
suffered the reverse: "hypoactivity -- that is, a slowing down
of their spontaneous movements -- sitting, standing, smelling, turning
the head, etc. ... The reactions of these animals reminded me of
the reactions you'd find from high exposures to radiation."
Mullenix says that her superiors ordered her not to publish her
results. "Don Hay, the associate director of Forsyth, came
and told me, 'If you publish this information, we won't get any
more grants from NIDR [the National Institute of Dental Research],'
and Forsyth gets about 90 percent of its money from NIDR. I was
really upset. I'd never been told not to publish a paper."
Within hours of learning that she was indeed publishing her paper,
Forsyth fired her, says Mullenix.
"Dr. Mullenix's claim that I wanted to stop her publishing
her results, showing a fluoride toxicity in rats, is false,"
wrote Donald Hay, after consulting with his institute's attorneys.
"My concern was that Dr. Mullenix, who had no published record
in fluoride research, was reaching conclusions that seemed to differ
from a large body of research reported over the last fifty years.
These extensive studies have been reviewed and approved by prestigious
organizations (American Medical Association and American Dental
Association), and indicated that fluoride at ordinary levels was
safe. I brought these concerns to her attention." Hay adds,
"Dr. Mullenix's claim that she was dismissed after her fluoride
paper was accepted is false. We had no knowledge of the acceptance
of her paper prior to the time she left [Forsyth]." Hay says
Mullenix was dismissed because of problems with the quality of her
work.
See also: Statement
from Dr. Phyllis Mullenix on the Neurotoxicity of Fluoride
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