Fluoride is a mineral that occurs naturally in almost all foods and water supplies. The
fluoride ion comes from the element fluorine. Fluorine, the 13th most abundant element in
the earth's crust, is never encountered in its free state in nature. It exists only in
combination with other elements as a fluoride compound.
Fluoride is effective in preventing and reversing the early signs of tooth decay.
Researchers have shown that there are several ways through which fluoride achieves its
decay-preventive effects. It makes the tooth structure stronger, so teeth are more
resistant to acid attacks. Acid is formed when the bacteria in plaque break down sugars
and carbohydrates from the diet. Repeated acid attacks break down the tooth, which causes
cavities. Fluoride also acts to repair areas in which acid attacks have already begun.
The remineralization effect of fluoride is important because it reverses the early decay
process as well as creating a tooth surface that is more resistant to decay.
Community water fluoridation is the adjustment of the amount of the beneficial trace
element fluoride found in water to provide for the proper protection of teeth.
Fluoridation has been widely utilized in this country since 1945. It does not involve
adding anything to the water that is not already there, since virtually all sources of
drinking water in the United States contain some fluoride. Fluoridation is a form of
nutritional supplementation that is not unlike the addition of vitamins to milk, breads
and fruit drinks; iodine to table salt; and both vitamins and minerals to breakfast
cereals, grains and pastas.
The protection of fluoridation reaches community members in their homes, at work and at
school -- simply by drinking the water. The only requirements for the implementation of
fluoridation are the presence of a treatable centralized water supply and approval by
appropriate decision makers.
Some people believe that there are effective alternatives to community water fluoridation
as a public health measure for the prevention of tooth decay in the United States. The
fact of the matter is that while other community-based methods of systemic and topical
fluoride delivery (i.e. school-based fluoride mouthwash or tablet programs) have been
developed over the five decades that water fluoridation has been practiced, none is as
effective as community water fluoridation and none is free from financial constraints or
other drawbacks. Alternatives to community water fluoridation remain useful only for
populations significantly isolated from public water systems.
Nearly 145 million Americans are currently receiving the benefits of optimally
fluoridated water. With the 1995 enactment of Assembly Bill 733 in California, ten states
and territories in the United States now mandate fluoridation through legislation.
Besides California, these include seven other states (Connecticut, Georgia, Illinois,
Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio and South Dakota), as well as the District of Columbia and
Puerto Rico. Three states (South Dakota, Rhode Island and Kentucky), as well as the
District of Columbia, have achieved the ultimate success with 100 percent of their
treatable community water systems providing the benefits of fluoridation to their
citizens.
While safety has been an issue frequently raised by those opposed to fluoridation,
scientific data from peer-reviewed clinical research provide overwhelming evidence that
the adjustment of fluoride levels in drinking water to the optimal level is undoubtedly
safe. Hundreds of studies on fluoride metabolism have tracked the outcomes of ingested
fluoride. Ingested fluoride essentially travels three metabolic pathways. It is either
excreted by the kidneys, absorbed by the teeth or taken up in the skeleton.
At optimal levels fluoride has never been demonstrated to cause skeletal fluorosis or
other bone problems. On the contrary, there is mounting evidence that continued exposure
of individuals to low levels of fluoride, as in optimally fluoridated drinking water,
results in a decrease in osteoporosis and a decrease in concurrent susceptibility to
vertebral fracture. Furthermore, there is no evidence of increased morbidity or mortality
from any disorder for those with lifetime exposures to optimally fluoridated drinking
water.
Those opposed to water fluoridation claim that exposure to fluoridated water increases an
individual's risk of suffering from several forms of cancer. Again, the overwhelming
weight of scientific evidence indicates otherwise. Over 50 studies have evaluated the
potential relationship of water fluoridation and cancer mortality. None found any
credible evidence that exposure to water fluoridation is in any way related to an
increased risk of cancer in humans. A number of national and international scientific
commissions, after reviewing all of the available scientific literature, also concluded
that water fluoridation was safe and that it in no way related to increased risk to
humans of any form of cancer. Finally, a 1990 study of fluoridated and fluoride-deficient
communities by the U.S. National Cancer Institute revealed no link between exposure of
any populations to fluoridation and the incidence of many different types of cancer
occurring in a 14-year period.
Mottled enamel or dental fluorosis has been claimed to be an indication of the "toxic
effects of fluoridation" by those opposed to fluoridation. Technically, dental fluorosis
is a developmental defect of enamel that can occur when a higher than optimal amount of
fluoride is ingested at the same time as the stage of tooth development when enamel is
being formed. The severity of the fluorosis is directly related to the age of the child
at exposure, the type of exposure, the level of exposure, and the duration of exposure.
It is important to note that fluorosis can only occur during the period when teeth are
developing. Once teeth have formed, fluorosis can no longer occur. The mildest form of
dental fluorosis may appear in about 10 percent of those exposed to optimally fluoridated
water. Most mild to moderate fluorosis occurs not from the ingestion of properly
fluoridated water, but from the unnecessary and inappropriate prescribing of fluoride
supplement tablets or drops for children in fluoridated areas and the inappropriate
ingestion of large amounts of fluoride-containing toothpaste by young children not
properly supervised during toothbrushing. The presence of dental fluorosis at any
aesthetic level is not related to any other adverse conditions in humans, nor is there
any evidence to show that dental fluorosis is a precursor to any disease or dysfunction.
Mild to moderate dental fluorosis is no more a pathological condition than is having
freckles.
There has never been a single valid, peer-reviewed laboratory, clinical or
epidemiological study that showed that drinking water with fluoride at optimal levels
caused cancer, heart disease, or any of the other multitude of diseases proclaimed by
very small groups of antifluoridationists to be caused by fluoridation.
Because fluoride is so effective, those fortunate enough to be provided with fluoridated
water can count on an up to 40- to 50-percent reduction in the number of dental cavities
they would have experienced without fluoridation. Fluoridation is an extremely
cost-effective public health measure because the technology is so simple and the fluoride
so inexpensive. Studies indicate that a $100,000 investment in water fluoridation
prevents 500,000 cavities. Moreover, for each dollar invested in fluoridation, over $80
in dental treatment costs are prevented, amounting to an 80:1 benefit-to-cost ratio. Few
disease prevention efforts, public or private, achieve that level of return on
investment.
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