The following documents why our union, formerly National
Federation of Federal Employees Local 2050 and since April
1998 Chapter 280 of the National Treasury Employees Union,
took the stand it did opposing fluoridation of drinking
water supplies.
Our union is comprised of and represents the approximately
1500 scientists, lawyers, engineers and other professional
employees at EPA Headquarters here in Washington, D.C.
The union first became interested in this issue rather by
accident. Like most Americans, including many physicians and
dentists, most of our members had thought that fluoride's
only effects were beneficial - reductions in tooth decay,
etc. We too believed assurances of safety and effectiveness
of water fluoridation.
Then, as EPA was engaged in revising its drinking water
standard for fluoride in 1985, an employee came to the union
with a complaint: he said he was being forced to write into
the regulation a statement to the effect that EPA thought it
was alright for children to have "funky" teeth. It was OK,
EPA said, because it considered that condition to be only a
cosmetic effect, not an adverse health effect. The reason
for this EPA position was that it was under political
pressure to set its health-based standard for fluoride at 4
mg/liter. At that level, EPA knew that a significant number
of children develop moderate to severe dental fluorosis, but
since it had deemed the effect as only cosmetic, EPA didn't
have to set its health-based standard at a lower level to
prevent it.
We tried to settle this ethics issue quietly, within the
family, but EPA was unable or unwilling to resist external
political pressure, and we took the fight public with a
union amicus curiae brief in a lawsuit filed against EPA by
a public interest group. The union has published on this
initial involvement period in detail.\1
Since then our opposition to drinking water fluoridation has
grown, based on the scientific literature documenting the
increasingly out-of-control exposures to fluoride, the lack
of benefit to dental health from ingestion of fluoride and
the hazards to human health from such ingestion. These
hazards include acute toxic hazard, such as to people with
impaired kidney function, as well as chronic toxic hazards
of gene mutations, cancer, reproductive effects,
neurotoxicity, bone pathology and dental fluorosis. First, a
review of recent neurotoxicity research results.
In 1995, Mullenix and co-workers \2 showed that rats given
fluoride in drinking water at levels that give rise to
plasma fluoride concentrations in the range seen in humans
suffer neurotoxic effects that vary according to when the
rats were given the fluoride - as adult animals, as young
animals, or through the placenta before birth. Those exposed
before birth were born hyperactive and remained so
throughout their lives. Those exposed as young or adult
animals displayed depressed activity. Then in 1998, Guan and
co-workers \3 gave doses similar to those used by the
Mullenix research group to try to understand the mechanism(s)
underlying the effects seen by the Mullenix group. Guan's
group found that several key chemicals in the brain - those
that form the membrane of brain cells - were substantially
depleted in rats given fluoride, as compared to those who
did not get fluoride.
Another 1998 publication by Varner, Jensen and others \4
reported on the brain- and kidney damaging effects in rats
that were given fluoride in drinking water at the same level
deemed "optimal" by pro-fluoridation groups, namely 1 part
per million (1 ppm). Even more pronounced damage was seen in
animals that got the fluoride in conjunction with aluminum.
These results are especially disturbing because of the low
dose level of fluoride that shows the toxic effect in rats -
rats are more resistant to fluoride than humans. This latter
statement is based on Mullenix's finding that it takes
substantially more fluoride in the drinking water of rats
than of humans to reach the same fluoride level in plasma.
It is the level in plasma that determines how much fluoride
is "seen" by particular tissues in the body. So when rats
get 1 ppm in drinking water, their brains and kidneys are
exposed to much less fluoride than humans getting 1 ppm, yet
they are experiencing toxic effects. Thus we are compelled
to consider the likelihood that humans are experiencing
damage to their brains and kidneys at the "optimal" level of
1 ppm.
In support of this concern are results from two epidemiology
studies from China\5,\6 that show decreases in I.Q. in
children who get more fluoride than the control groups of
children in each study. These decreases are about 5 to 10
I.Q. points in children aged 8 to 13 years.
Another troubling brain effect has recently surfaced:
fluoride's interference with the function of the brain's
pineal gland. The pineal gland produces melatonin which,
among other roles, mediates the body's internal clock, doing
such things as governing the onset of puberty. Jennifer
Luke\7 has shown that fluoride accumulates in the pineal
gland and inhibits its production of melatonin. She showed
in test animals that this inhibition causes an earlier onset
of sexual maturity, an effect reported in humans as well in
1956, as part of the Kingston/Newburgh study, which is
discussed below. In fluoridated Newburgh, young girls
experienced earlier onset of menstruation (on average, by
six months) than girls in non-fluoridated Kingston \8.
From a risk assessment perspective, all these brain effect
data are particularly compelling and disturbing because they
are convergent.
We looked at the cancer data with alarm as well. There are
epidemiology studies that are convergent with whole-animal
and single-cell studies (dealing with the cancer hazard),
just as the neurotoxicity research just mentioned all points
in the same direction. EPA fired the Office of Drinking
Water's chief toxicologist, Dr. William Marcus, who also was
our local union's treasurer at the time, for refusing to
remain silent on the cancer risk issue\9 . The judge who
heard the lawsuit he brought against EPA over the firing
made that finding - that EPA fired him over his fluoride
work and not for the phony reason put forward by EPA
management at his dismissal. Dr. Marcus won his lawsuit and
is again at work at EPA. Documentation is available on
request.
The type of cancer of particular concern with fluoride,
although not the only type, is osteosarcoma, especially in
males. The National Toxicology Program conducted a two-year
study \10 in which rats and mice were given sodium fluoride
in drinking water. The positive result of that study (in
which malignancies in tissues other than bone were also
observed), particularly in male rats, is convergent with a
host of data from tests showing fluoride's ability to cause
mutations (a principal "trigger" mechanism for inducing a
cell to become cancerous) e.g.\11a, b, c, d and data showing
increases in osteosarcomas in young men in New Jersey \12 ,
Washington and Iowa \13 based on their drinking fluoridated
water. It was his analysis, repeated statements about all
these and other incriminating cancer data, and his requests
for an independent, unbiased evaluation of them that got Dr.
Marcus fired.
Bone pathology other than cancer is a concern as well. An
excellent review of this issue was published by Diesendorf
et al. in 1997 \14. Five epidemiology studies have shown a
higher rate of hip fractures in fluoridated vs.
non-fluoridated communities. \15a, b, c, d, e. Crippling
skeletal fluorosis was the endpoint used by EPA to set its
primary drinking water standard in 1986, and the ethical
deficiencies in that standard setting process prompted our
union to join the Natural Resources Defense Council in
opposing the standard in court, as mentioned above.
Regarding the effectiveness of fluoride in reducing dental
cavities, there has not been any double-blind study of
fluoride's effectiveness as a caries preventative. There
have been many, many small scale, selective publications on
this issue that proponents cite to justify fluoridation, but
the largest and most comprehensive study, one done by
dentists trained by the National Institute of Dental
Research, on over 39,000 school children aged 5-17 years,
shows no significant differences (in terms of decayed,
missing and filled teeth) among caries incidences in
fluoridated, non-fluoridated and partially fluoridated
communities.\16. The latest publication \17 on the
fifty-year fluoridation experiment in two New York cities,
Newburgh and Kingston, shows the same thing. The only
significant difference in dental health between the two
communities as a whole is that fluoridated Newburgh, N.Y.
shows about twice the incidence of dental fluorosis (the
first, visible sign of fluoride chronic toxicity) as seen in
non-fluoridated Kingston.
John Colquhoun's publication on this point of efficacy is
especially important\18. Dr. Colquhoun was Principal Dental
Officer for Auckland, the largest city in New Zealand, and a
staunch supporter of fluoridation - until he was given the
task of looking at the world-wide data on fluoridation's
effectiveness in preventing cavities. The paper is titled,
"Why I changed My Mind About Water Fluoridation." In it
Colquhoun provides details on how data were manipulated to
support fluoridation in English speaking countries,
especially the U.S. and New Zealand. This paper explains why
an ethical public health professional was compelled to do a
180 degree turn on fluoridation.
Further on the point of the tide turning against drinking
water fluoridation, statements are now coming from other
dentists in the pro-fluoride camp who are starting to warn
that topical fluoride (e.g. fluoride in tooth paste) is the
only significantly beneficial way in which that substance
affects dental health \19, \20, \21. However, if the
concentrations of fluoride in the oral cavity are sufficient
to inhibit bacterial enzymes and cause other bacteriostatic
effects, then those concentrations are also capable of
producing adverse effects in mammalian tissue, which
likewise relies on enzyme systems. This statement is based
not only on common sense, but also on results of mutation
studies which show that fluoride can cause gene mutations in
mammalian and lower order tissues at fluoride concentrations
estimated to be present in the mouth from fluoridated tooth
paste\22. Further, there were tumors of the oral cavity seen
in the NTP cancer study mentioned above, further
strengthening concern over the toxicity of topically applied
fluoride.
In any event, a person can choose whether to use fluoridated
tooth paste or not (although finding non-fluoridated kinds
is getting harder and harder), but one cannot avoid fluoride
when it is put into the public water supplies.
So, in addition to our concern over the toxicity of
fluoride, we note the uncontrolled - and apparently
uncontrollable - exposures to fluoride that are occurring
nationwide via drinking water, processed foods, fluoride
pesticide residues and dental care products. A recent report
in the lay media\23, that, according to the Centers for
Disease Control, at least 22 percent of America's children
now have dental fluorosis, is just one indication of this
uncontrolled, excess exposure. The finding of nearly 12
percent incidence of dental fluorosis among children in
un-fluoridated Kingston New York\17 is another. For
governmental and other organizations to continue to push for
more exposure in the face of current levels of over-exposure
coupled with an increasing crescendo of adverse toxicity
findings is irrational and irresponsible at best.
Thus, we took the stand that a policy which makes the public
water supply a vehicle for disseminating this toxic and
prophylactically useless (via ingestion, at any rate)
substance is wrong.
We have also taken a direct step to protect the employees we
represent from the risks of drinking fluoridated water. We
applied EPA's risk control methodology, the Reference Dose,
to the recent neurotoxicity data. The Reference Dose is the
daily dose, expressed in milligrams of chemical per kilogram
of body weight, that a person can receive over the long term
with reasonable assurance of safety from adverse effects.
Application of this methodology to the Varner et al.\4 data
leads to a Reference Dose for fluoride of 0.000007
mg/kg-day. Persons who drink about one quart of fluoridated
water from the public drinking water supply of the District
of Columbia while at work receive about 0.01mg/kg-day from
that source alone. This amount of fluoride is more than 100
times the Reference Dose. On the basis of these results the
union filed a grievance, asking that EPA provide
un-fluoridated drinking water to its employees.
The implication for the general public of these calculations
is clear. Recent, peer-reviewed toxicity data, when applied
to EPA's standard method for controlling risks from toxic
chemicals, require an immediate halt to the use of the
nation's drinking water reservoirs as disposal sites for the
toxic waste of the phosphate fertilizer industry\24.
This document was prepared on behalf of the National
Treasury Employees Union Chapter 280 by Chapter Senior
Vice-President J. William Hirzy, Ph.D. For more information
please call Dr. Hirzy at 202-260-4683.
Forwarded by Paul Connett www.fluorideACTIONnetwork.net
END NOTE LITERATURE CITATIONS
1. Applying the NAEP code of ethics to the Environmental
Protection Agency and the fluoride in drinking water
standard. Carton, R.J. and Hirzy, J.W. Proceedings of the
23rd Ann. Conf. of the National Association of Environmental
Professionals. 20-24 June, 1998. GEN 51-61.
2. Neurotoxicity of sodium fluoride in rats. Mullenix, P.J.,
Denbesten, P.K., Schunior, A. and Kernan, W.J. Neurotoxicol.
Teratol. 17 169-177 (1995)
3. Influence of chronic fluorosis on membrane lipids in rat
brain. Z.Z. Guan, Y.N. Wang, K.Q. Xiao, D.Y. Dai, Y.H. Chen,
J.L. Liu, P. Sindelar and G. Dallner, Neurotoxicology and
Teratology 20 537-542 (1998).
4. Chronic administration of aluminum- fluoride or
sodium-fluoride to rats in drinking water: alterations in
neuronal and cerebrovascular integrity. Varner, J.A.,
Jensen, K.F., Horvath, W. And Isaacson, R.L. Brain Research
784 284-298 (1998).
5. Effect of high fluoride water supply on children's
intelligence. Zhao, L.B., Liang, G.H., Zhang, D.N., and Wu,
X.R. Fluoride 29 190-192 (1996)
6. Effect of fluoride exposure on intelligence in children.
Li, X.S., Zhi, J.L., and Gao, R.O. Fluoride 28 (1995). 7.
Effect of fluoride on the physiology of the pineal gland.
Luke, J.A. Caries Research 28 204 (1994).
8. Newburgh-Kingston caries-fluorine study XIII. Pediatric
findings after ten years. Schlesinger, E.R., Overton, D.E.,
Chase, H.C., and Cantwell, K.T. JADA 52 296-306 (1956).
9. Memorandum dated May 1, 1990. Subject: Fluoride
Conference to Review the NTP Draft Fluoride Report; From:
Wm. L. Marcus, Senior Science Advisor ODW; To: Alan B. Hais,
Acting Director Criteria & Standards Division ODW.
10. Toxicology and carcinogenesis studies of sodium fluoride
in F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice. NTP Report No. 393 (1991).
11a. Chromosome aberrations, sister chromatid exchanges,
unscheduled DNA synthesis and morphological neoplastic
transformation in Syrian hamster embryo cells. Tsutsui et
al. Cancer Research 44 938-941 (1984).
11b. Cytotoxicity, chromosome aberrations and unscheduled
DNA synthesis in cultured human diploid fibroblasts. Tsutsui
et al. Mutation Research 139 193-198 (1984).
11c. Positive mouse lymphoma assay with and without S-9
activation; positive sister chromatid exchange in Chinese
hamster ovary cells with and without S-9 activation;
positive chromosome aberration without S-9 activation.
Toxicology and carcinogenesis studies of sodium fluoride in
F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice. NTP Report No. 393 (1991).
11d. An increase in the number of Down's syndrome babies
born to younger mothers in cities following fluoridation.
Science and Public Policy 12 36-46 (1985).
12. A brief report on the association of drinking water
fluoridation and the incidence of osteosarcoma among young
males. Cohn, P.D. New Jersey Department of Health (1992).
13. Surveillance, epidemiology and end results (SEER)
program. National Cancer Institute in Review of fluoride
benefits and risks. Department of Health and Human Services.
F1-F7 (1991).
14. New evidence on fluoridation. Diesendorf, M., Colquhoun,
J., Spittle, B.J., Everingham, D.N., and Clutterbuck, F.W.
Australian and New Zealand J. Public Health. 21 187-190
(1997).
15a. Regional variation in the incidence of hip fracture:
U.S. white women aged 65 years and older. Jacobsen, S.J.,
Goldberg, J., Miles, T.P. et al. JAMA 264 500-502 (1990)
15b. Hip fracture and fluoridation in Utah's elderly
population. Danielson, C., Lyon, J.L., Egger, M., and
Goodenough, G.K. JAMA 268 746-748 (1992).
15c. The association between water fluoridation and hip
fracture among white women and men aged 65 years and older:
a national ecological study. Jacobsen, S.J., Goldberg, J.,
Cooper, C. and Lockwood, S.A. Ann. Epidemiol.2 617-626
(1992).
15d. Fluorine concentration is drinking water and fractures
in the elderly [letter]. Jacqmin-Gadda, H., Commenges, D.
and Dartigues, J.F. JAMA 273 775-776 (1995).
15e. Water fluoridation and hip fracture [letter]. Cooper,
C., Wickham, C.A.C., Barker, D.J.R. and Jacobson, S.J. JAMA
266 513-514 (1991).
16. Water fluoridation and tooth decay: Results from the
1986-1987 national survey of U.S. school children.
Yiamouyannis, J. Fluoride 23 55-67 (1990).
17. Recommendations for fluoride use in children. Kumar, J.V.
and Green, E.L. New York State Dent. J. (1998) 40-47.
18. Why I changed my mind about water fluoridation.
Colquhoun, J. Perspectives in Biol. And Medicine 41 1-16
(1997).
19. A re-examination of the pre-eruptive and post-eruptive
mechanism of the anti-caries effects of fluoride: is there
any anti-caries benefit from swallowing fluoride? Limeback,
H. Community Dent. Oral Epidemiol. 27 62-71 (1999).
20. Fluoride supplements for young children: an analysis of
the literature focussing on benefits and risks. Riordan, P.J.
Community Dent. Oral Epidemiol. 27 72-83 (1999).
21. Prevention and reversal of dental caries: role of low
level fluoride. Featherstone, J.D. Community Dent. Oral
Epidemiol. 27 31-40 (1999).
22. Appendix H. Review of fluoride benefits and risks.
Department of Health and Human Services. H1-H6 (1991).
23.Some young children get too much fluoride. Parker-Pope,
T. Wall Street Journal Dec. 21, 1998.
24. Letter from Rebecca Hanmer, Deputy Assistant
Administrator for Water, to Leslie Russell re: EPA view on
use of by-product fluosilicic (sic) acid as low cost source
of fluoride to water authorities. March 30, 1983.
OTHER CITATIONS (This short list does not include the entire
literature on fluoride effects)
a. Exposure to high fluoride concentrations in drinking
water is associated with decreased birth rates. Freni, S.C.
J. Toxicol. Environ. Health 42 109-121 (1994)
b. Ameliorative effects of reduced food-borne fluoride on
reproduction in silver foxes. Eckerlin, R.H., Maylin, G.A.,
Krook, L., and Carmichael, D.T. Cornell Vet. 78 75-91
(1988).
c. Milk production of cows fed fluoride contaminated
commercial feed. Eckerlin, R.H., Maylin, G.A., and Krook, L.
Cornell Vet. 76 403-404 (1986).
d. Maternal-fetal transfer of fluoride in pregnant women.
Calders, R., Chavine, J., Fermanian, J., Tortrat, D., and
Laurent, A.M. Biol. Neonate 54 263-269 (1988).
e. Effects of fluoride on screech owl reproduction:
teratological evaluation, growth, and blood chemistry in
hatchlings. Hoffman, D.J., Pattee, O.H., and Wiemeyer, S.N.
Toxicol. Lett. 26 19-24 (1985).
f. Fluoride intoxication in dairy calves. Maylin, G.A.,
Eckerlin, R.H., and Krook, L. Cornell Vet. 77 84-98 (1987).
g. Fluoride inhibition of protein synthesis. Holland, R.I.
Cell Biol. Int. Rep. 3 701-705 (1979).
h. An unexpectedly strong hydrogen bond: ab initio
calculations and spectroscopic studies of amide-fluoride
systems. Emsley, J., Jones, D.J., Miller, J.M., Overill, R.E.
and Waddilove, R.A. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 103 24-28 (1981).
i. The effect of sodium fluoride on the growth and
differentiation of human fetal osteoblasts. Song, X.D.,
Zhang, W.Z., Li, L.Y., Pang, Z.L., and Tan, Y.B. Fluoride 21
149-158 (1988).
j. Modulation of phosphoinositide hydrolysis by NaF and
aluminum in rat cortical slices. Jope, R.S. J. Neurochem. 51
1731-1736 (1988).
k. The crystal structure of fluoride-inhibited cytochrome c
peroxidase. Edwards, S.L., Poulos, T.L., Kraut, J. J. Biol.
Chem. 259 12984-12988 (1984).
l. Intracellular fluoride alters the kinetic properties of
calcium currents facilitating the investigation of synaptic
events in hippocampal neurons. Kay, A.R., Miles, R., and
Wong, R.K.S. J. Neurosci. 6 2915-2920 (1986).
m. Fluoride intoxication: a clinical-hygienic study with a
review of the literature and some experimental
investigations. Roholm, K. H.K. Lewis Ltd (London) (1937).
n. Toxin-induced blood vessel inclusions caused by the
chronic administration of aluminum and sodium fluoride and
their implications for dementia. Isaacson, R.L., Varner, J.A.,
and Jensen, K. F. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 825 152-166 (1997).
o. Allergy and hypersensitivity to fluoride. Spittle, B.
Fluoride 26 267-273 (1993)