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Critique of Touted Dental Study Reveals Fluoridation
Conclusions Not Supported by Data
Thursday February 3, 12:15 pm Eastern Time - Company Press
Release
ESCONDIDO, Calif.- (BW HealthWire) - Feb. 3, 2000 - The first-ever independent
review of the California Oral Health Needs Assessment of 1993-94, was delivered
to the City of Escondido on Tuesday, February 1st.
The analysis of the Needs Assessment was performed by the internationally
renowned Series Oak Ridge Inc., Center for Risk Assessment in Tennessee.
The repeated message of the 25 page review was that the results of the
California study as reported by Pollick et al, (1994), and subsequent brochures,
do not support its primary conclusion, namely that increased fluoridation of
public water supplies and increased supplementation of fluoride in non
fluoridated areas are warranted.
The City of Escondido contracted with Series Oak Ridge to perform the review
last year after the authors of the study revealed at an Escondido council
meeting that they used the unpublished study to lobby Legislators' votes for the
passage of AB733, the 1995 state mandate calling for 167 cities and water
districts to add fluoride to their water.
While noting it was not intended to be an exhaustive review, the reviewers
concentrated on the issues that were expected to be most important: study
design, sampling and data collection methods, and analysis of the results --
whether the results follow logically from the data.
Summing up the predominant criticism of the study, the reviewers explained, "In
other words, the major endpoint of importance (caries prevalence) has not been
analyzed with respect to some of the most important factors assumed to affect
it.
"It is not correct, for example, to conclude that children in fluoridated areas
have fewer cavities per child when (a) the actual individual fluoride exposures
have not been evaluated, and (b) factors that might have contributed to the high
caries experience of a few children, or to the low 7 caries experience of many
children, have not been fully explored."
Escondido City Council Member Marie Waldron stated, "This is a classic example
of the manipulation of science to prove a case. This study in effect compares
non-poor children in fluoridated communities, with protective sealants on their
teeth, against poor children in Head Start programs in non fluoridated
communities, with no sealants on their teeth. Who are we kidding here?
"Like a lot of other people, I don't want to have to read through volumes of
statistical analysis in an area with which I am not familiar. But, the promoters
of fluoridation wouldn't have put this obviously skewed study in front of us if
they had the science they claimed to have. They told us we didn't need to look
at the science, that we should just trust them," said Waldron.
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The study at no time attempts to quantify a
deficiency or total fluoride exposure of children from all sources, either on
an 'individual basis or on an average basis by regional fluoridation status.
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No consideration is given to variations in
exposure to dietary items such as fluoride-containing sodas, fruit -juices,
cereals, white grape juice, teas; and fluoride pesticide residues on produce
such as lettuce, tomatoes, cabbage and raisins; or even bottled water and use
of fluoridated toothpaste.
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The study design clearly states that the study
sample is not representative of all of California's children; nor
representative with respect to randomness or distribution across races,
economic levels, geographic regions, etc,, nor collected blindly, without
prior knowledge of a child's fluoridation
status.
In answer to "specific concerns" on possible political motivations behind the
Needs Assessment, the reviewers suggested that these should be the concern of
the funding agency or the state legislature. The subject of these concerns
included the sole-source contract being awarded to the Dental Health Foundation
whose founding purpose was to promote the fluoridation of California, possible
conflict of interest of an author of the Needs Assessment who was simultaneously
employed by the State, and joint collaboration by the State and the Contractor,
as participating members of the CA Fluoridation Task Force.
"This Oral Health Needs Assessment was an intentionally non-published, non
peer-reviewed, expensive study that they expected not one of us without a
background in science would want to read. So they offered summarizing bullet
points and glossy brochures to our Council, and evidently to many others
throughout the entire state, as proof that we should convert our precious water
supply into a delivery system for special interests, forcing those who can not
afford bottled water to drink industrial-waste fluoride every, day of their
lives." - "Not here!" said Waldron.
Other selected past or present government clients
served by Senes Oak Ridge:
Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR)
Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
National Academy
of Sciences (NAS)
National Cancer
Institute
National
Oceanographic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
State of Colorado,
State of Idaho, State of Kentucky, State of Tennessee
U. S. Army Corps
of Engineers
U.S. Department of
Energy
U. S. Department
of Justice
U. S.
Environmental Protection Agency
U. S. National
Park Service
U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission
World Health
Organization
http://www.fluoride-journal.com
http://www.nofluoride.com
http://www.cadvision.com/fluoride
http://www.SaveTeeth.org
http://www.sonic.net/~kryptox/fluoride.htm
http://www.bruha.com/fluoride/html/virtual_library.html
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