Response to ‘No conclusive proof of negative benefits’
Lloyd Mudiwa, Irish Medical Times, 12th June 2015
Can someone please start thinking rationally here, please? The
objective of fluoridation of public water supplies is to prevent dental decay -
a purely medicinal function. So the correct stratagem is first to determine
whether or not it actually is beneficial to dental health. If it’s not, end of
argument - you stop. There’s no further excuse to continue with the treatment,
and looking for adverse side effects is simply a waste of time and money.
Only if it does function as claimed, and the medical benefits
are significant, is it then rational to look at other potentially adverse health
outcomes. So the entire decision rests on that simple first principle of
medicine -do no harm. If it works, then check it out further - if it doesn't
then abandon it and find another intervention that does. work
So does fluoridation actually work as claimed? Here we start to
go around the same tired old circuit, Virtually all investigations into this
controversial field rely on epidemiological evidence which is, by modern
standards and definition, not first class evidence. It doesn't hold a candle to
the Gold Standard highly structured research protocols used in toxicological
studies under closely controlled conditions.
The York Review of 2000 lamented the absence of high quality
evidence for the claimed benefits of fluoridation, conceding that ‘the best
available evidence’ appeared to suggest that they might exist. But that was the
‘best’ of a pretty poor bunch of evidence to start with - that’s ‘best’ in the
sense that it was derived from the best of a poor collection of works. Yet that
unfortunate wording has provided proponents with all the ammunition they needed
to misuse the York Review’s evidence ever since. That’s not how science should
be treated, especially when it’s dealing with public health interventions on a
very large scale.
If you want to see just how far this misuse of data has gone in
this field, you couldn't do better than check out the recent review of water
fluoridation from Britain’s Public Health England. This apparently authoritative
analysis relies on the National Surveys of Oral Health on children, carried out
periodically by our National Health Service. In fact those surveys are utterly
worthless. They rely on calculations of dental decay and damage that are derived
from sample sizes so small that the derived estimates are statistically
meaningless. Certainly they cannot be used to support any interventional policy
decisions, and the claim that they do is mischievous, to put it mildly!
The statistical fraud underlying in such bureaucratic strategies
is breathtaking, yet this document is now relied upon by Health Authorities
attempting to justify their obsession with fluoridation on the spurious grounds
that ‘research’ evidence supports that policy, when it manifestly does not. The
whole charade is a political scam to continue the pressure to fluoridate yet
more water supplies.
So it’s time to stop arguing about those possible adverse side
effects - they’re irrelevant. There is, still, no conclusive evidence that it
works, so just stop doing it. No medicinal intervention should be continued
after the course of treatment is completed (which is of course, why it is now
claimed that fluoridation benefits even the edentate elderly!) or else it is
found not to work. To do so is a serious violation of medical ethics, and can
even lead to lawyers knocking at the office or surgery door.
Douglas Cross CSci, CBiol, FRSB
AM Institute of Advanced Studies, Basel, Switzerland.
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