Spin Doctoring: Toxins - Fluoride Chris Gupta
June 22, 2004
There is a book that further expands on the
post 'Fluoridation Revisited' discussion of Spin doctoring:
..."The drive to encourage public acceptance of fluoride was
handed over to Edward Bernays, known as the father of PR, or
the original spin doctor, and the man who helped persuade
women to take up smoking. "You can get practically any idea
accepted," Bernays explained, "if doctors are in favor. The
public is willing to accept it because a doctor is an
authority to most people, regardless of how much he knows or
doesn't know."
Among the things that the doctors who endorsed fluoridation
didn't know, according to Bryson, were that research impugning
fluoride's safety was either suppressed or not conducted in
the first place. When one doctor reported that fluoride
supplements produced harmful side-effects in pregnant women,
he received no funding to carry out further work."...
How to Stop Being Manipulated!
..."As dental health rapidly improved during those decades, so
the benefits of fluoridation were held to be incontestable.
Just like vaccines, antibiotic and other mostly toxic drugs
are considered incontestable today.
But it always boils down to "better diet and treatment, dental
health was improving across the western world, irrespective of
fluoridation. Recent studies of communities in Finland, Cuba,
Canada and east Germany have found that rates of dental decay
did not rise (and, indeed, continued to decline) after
fluoridation was abandoned."...
"The very same professionals and institutions who told us that
fluoride was safe said much the same about lead, asbestos or
DDT, or persuaded us to smoke more cigarettes."
Fluoridation today is largely restricted to English-speaking
countries.
It was hailed as a harmless chemical that would prevent tooth
decay. But a new book claims that fluoride could be linked to
serious health problems.
Bob Woffinden
June 8, 2004
The Guardian
A 50-year-old medical controversy is about to be re-ignited.
The government is considering the introduction of further
fluoridation schemes throughout the country. To facilitate
that, the Water Act passed last November indemnified water
companies from civil or criminal actions as a result of adding
fluoride to public water supplies.
Fluoridation was first advanced in the United States at the
end of the second world war. Proponents argued that fluoride
in water and toothpaste would help to protect teeth and
prevent decay. It was a time of scientific evangelism, when
chemicals meant progress and the public trusted them to bring
about a safer, cleaner future.
Throughout the 1950s and 60s, fluoride was added to public
water supplies not just across the US but also in Britain. The
areas now served by the Severn Trent, Northumbrian and Anglian
water companies are fluoridated, mainly those in the West
Midlands and Tyneside - about 10% of the UK population. Much
of the Republic of Ireland has been fluoridated since 1964.
As dental health rapidly improved during those decades, so the
benefits of fluoridation were held to be incontestable.
However, with better diet and treatment, dental health was
improving across the western world, irrespective of
fluoridation. Recent studies of communities in Finland, Cuba,
Canada and east Germany have found that rates of dental decay
did not rise (and, indeed, continued to decline) after
fluoridation was abandoned. Fluoridation today is largely
restricted to English-speaking countries.
Many believe that the effects of fluoride on teeth, beneficial
or otherwise, are irrelevant; what matters is the accumulating
research evidence that fluoride may have serious adverse
health effects. However, the government wanted to extend
fluoridation schemes, ostensibly to benefit those in poorer
areas. So, it set up the York Review to allow leading
scientists to examine the issue. One of the review's
conclusions in September 2000 was that there had been
"surprisingly" little research into fluoride's harmful
effects, and emphasised the need for "high-quality research",
specifically into the possible links between fluoride and
"infant mortality, congenital defects and IQ".
A subsequent inquiry into fluoridation by the Medical Research
Council recommended an updated analysis of data on fluoride
and cancer rates, but concluded that "there is no evidence for
any significant health effects on the immune system, or
reproductive and developmental (birth) defects and no specific
research is recommended, although it is appropriate to keep
the area under review."
Now, a new book, The Fluoride Deception by Christopher Bryson,
just published in the US, examines the background of the
fluoridation debate. Bryson, who has had the advantage of
access to recently declassified files, concludes that
fluoridation is a triumph not of medical science but of US
government spin, adding that, "The very same professionals and
institutions who told us that fluoride was safe said much the
same about lead, asbestos or DDT, or persuaded us to smoke
more cigarettes."
In fact, in the 1930s, the very first researcher into
fluoride, a Dane called Kaj Roholm, specifically advised
against exposing children to fluoride, but his work was soon
buried. Bryson links the subsequent "discovery" that fluoride
benefited teeth with research paid for by major US industries
that needed to be able to defend "lawsuits from workers and
communities poisoned by industrial fluoride emissions".
In 1955, farmers in Oregon took Reynolds Metals to court,
alleging harm from fluoride emissions. The key medical experts
for the farmers were Donald Hunter, an English specialist in
industrial diseases, who told the court that fluoride was
particularly dangerous because it was "an enzyme poison"; and
Dr Richard Capps from Chicago, who gave evidence that fluoride
displaced iodine in the body, thus leading to thyroid
dysfunction. The farmers won a sensational victory, and US
industrialists were shaken. Dr Robert Kehoe, whose work was
funded by major US companies, resolved - according to Bryson -
to create a new medical orthodoxy that would be unassailable
in future court cases. Kehoe set up an experiment with
beagles, with the dogs breathing in fluoride. The results were
alarming, and showed that fluoride travelled rapidly from the
lungs into the blood stream, causing significant harm. Lawyers
for major US companies received copies of the dog study;
needless to say, it went no further. Until Bryson found it, no
one knew of its existence.
The drive to encourage public acceptance of fluoride was
handed over to Edward Bernays, known as the father of PR, or
the original spin doctor, and the man who helped persuade
women to take up smoking. "You can get practically any idea
accepted," Bernays explained, "if doctors are in favour. The
public is willing to accept it because a doctor is an
authority to most people, regardless of how much he knows or
doesn't know."
Among the things that the doctors who endorsed fluoridation
didn't know, according to Bryson, were that research impugning
fluoride's safety was either suppressed or not conducted in
the first place. When one doctor reported that fluoride
supplements produced harmful side-effects in pregnant women,
he received no funding to carry out further work.
So fluoride became equated with scientific progress, and those
opposing it were dismissed as cranks. For 30 years, little
changed, with both sides in their entrenched positions.
Yet putting fluoride into the water supply - at what the
Department of Health considers to be the "safe" level of one
part per million - would, according to opponents in the UK,
appear to ignore some important considerations. First, they
say it does not allow for individual sensitivities to
fluoride. Second, those suffering dietary deficiencies, who
may be low in calcium, magnesium and essential nutrients (in
other words, the poor and those in ill-health), will be more
vulnerable to fluoride's toxic properties. Third, the level of
fluoride in the water supply is no indication of an
individual's actual exposure. Those in certain professions -
for example, laborers or athletes - will take in more water,
and therefore more fluoride.
Also, there is regular exposure from other sources - fluoride
toothpaste, of course, as well as pesticide residues and
pharmaceuticals. In 1994, the World Health Organization
recommended that public health administrators should be aware
of "the total fluoride exposure in the population". In fact,
in Britain during the past 30 years, anti-fluoridation
campaigners claim that the public's overall exposure to
fluoride has become much greater, while the government's
ostensible "safe" limit has remained exactly the same.
They say that two of the major concerns in childhood
development today could be explained by fluoride. If it
interferes with the central nervous system, as some studies
have shown, then that could help to explain the growing
prevalence of Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.
There is also concern that fluoride displaces iodine in the
human body. Iodine is essential for normal functioning of the
thyroid gland. If fluoride, by displacing iodine, does inhibit
thyroid activity, then that would lead to weight gain and
obesity.
Moreover, iodine is essential for brain development. There are
now epidemiological studies from China that link fluoride
exposure with lower IQ levels. After Dr Phyllis Mullinex, a
leading neurotoxicologist in Boston, had carried out work on
rats, she reported that fluoride was likely to lead to lower
IQs. She was fired.
Bryson believes that what has made fluoride so impervious to
criticism so far is not just the PR offensive, but also -
paradoxically - fluoride's overall toxicity. Unlike chemicals
that have a signature effect (like the mesothelioma caused
byasbestos), fluoride is, he says, "a systemic poison, likely
to produce a range of health problems", so that its effects
are harder to diagnose.
"We've known about all this for a long time," says Jane Jones
of the National Pure Water Association, which campaigns
against fluoride, "now I hope the wider public will sit up and
take notice".
There are many in the UK who support the fluoridation of our
water supply, among them Ian Wylie, chief executive of the
British Dental Association, who argued in this paper recently:
"Scientific opinion worldwide is that low-dose fluoride has a
beneficial effect on oral health. In America, almost
two-thirds of the population has drunk water with fluoride,
without a problem, for decades."
The government has promised that no further fluoridation
schemes will be implemented without public consultations
beforehand. The debate is likely to be fierce and prolonged.