Fluoridated California communities have huge cavity rates
and large dentist-neglected populations, according to a
recent California study, reports the New York State
Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation (NYSCOF).
Although dentistry promises steep cavity reductions with
fluoride-laced water supplies, that’s not happening in
California which is in the midst of a cavity epidemic.
For example: fluoridated Long Beach children have more
cavities (75%) than California state (71%) despite a
state-wide fluoridation rate one-fourth that of Long
Beach. California is 27% fluoridated.
Los Angeles County is 44% fluoridated, yet 75% have tooth
decay. Santa Clara County, where several cities
fluoridate, has a 72% cavity rate. Humboldt County is 35%
fluoridated yet may have a higher cavity rate than
California as a whole. Despite five fluoridated districts,
Alameda County had double the statewide number of students
needing urgent dental care.
In contrast, NON-fluoridated Nassau County, New York, has
a 50% cavity rate.
Nationally, 50% of six- to eight-year-olds have cavities.
Fluoride is delivered to 2/3rds of Americans via public
water supplies and virtually 100% via the food supply.
The California Health Interview Survey (CHIS) predicted
that California pre-schoolers’ poor nutrition, soda
drinking, and poor dental care would lead to more tooth
decay.
“Cavity rates correlate with poor diet and lack of dental
care - two symptoms of poverty - not fluoride intake,”
says Paul Beeber, President of NYSCOF. “Fluoridation
proponents are unjustifiably using the California study to
promote fluoridation, when, in fact, it proves
fluoridation’s ineffectiveness,” says Beeber.
Calcium, magnesium, vitamins A, C, D and other nutrients,
not fluoride, are required to build and maintain healthy
teeth. Many California pre-schoolers lack these nutrients
because they do not consume recommended amounts of fruit,
vegetables, and milk while drinking too much soda.
With free and accessible dental care, military personnel’s
dental health exceeds their civilian counterparts, reports
the U.S. Surgeon General.
Forty-percent of California’s uninsured schoolchildren
have untreated decay. Few California dentists accept
Medicaid patients. Yet, dental groups oppose allowing
trained dental therapists to mitigate the oral health
epidemic.
Many fluoridated communities experience cavity crises in
the U.S. Children need dental care, not fluoridation.
“With soda such an obvious and preventable cause of tooth
decay, we question why the American Association of
Pediatric Dentists accepted a $1 million grant from
Coca-Cola,” says Beeber.
References:
http://groups.google.com/group/Fluoridation-News-Releases