Fluoride Alert
Last week, a "study" was published that claims
ending fluoridation caused a dramatic spike in cavities in the city of Calgary,
Alberta. The study, authored by a pro-fluoridation scientist, has fueled an
aggressive lobbying and public relations blitzkrieg throughout Canada, with the
aim of reversing Canada's wise and steady trend away from fluoridation. The
study is now being cited here in the U.S. as well.
Incredibly, however, the study OMITTED
critical data that directly contradicts the study's conclusion. The
omitted data shows very clearly that the cavity increase in Calgary began BEFORE
fluoridation ended, and -- more importantly -- that ending fluoridation had NO
EFFECT on the cavity trend.
To help visualize this, we have put together the
following figure which shows the omitted tooth decay data from Calgary's three
oral health surveys. As can be seen, the increase in tooth decay was occurring
well before fluoridated ended, and it continued to occur at the same rate when
fluoridation ended (in May 2011).
Yesterday, FAN issued a press release detailing the
findings of our investigation, which I have included below.
As part of our investigation, I wrote to Dr.
Trevor Sheldon, a renowned scientist who specializes in evaluating the
effectiveness of medical treatments. Dr. Sheldon is the Dean of the Hull York
Medical School and is familiar with the fluoridation issue, as he was one of the
scientists who authored the British Government's systematic fluoridation review
(York Review), which found that -- despite over 5 decades of fluoridating water
-- there has yet
to be a single high-quality study to prove the benefits.
In my letter to Dr. Sheldon, I asked him if he could
provide us his expert appraisal of this new pro-fluoridation study -- which he
very generously agreed to do. Dr. Sheldon is not a partisan in the fluoridation
debate; he has not taken a position on the issue, one way or the other. In his
analysis, however, Dr. Sheldon demolishes the Canadian study, laying bare its
myriad problems, including the big elephant in the room -- i.e., that the
omitted data shows no apparent increase in cavities after fluoridation
ended.
Dr. Sheldon's expert conclusion is that the Calgary
study does "not provide a valid assessment of the effect of fluoridation
cessation." You can read Dr. Sheldon's entire statement on our website here.
In addition to Dr. Sheldon's statement, I have put
together a short presentation which explains, in step-by-step fashion, how and
why the omitted data undermines the conclusion of the Canadian study. I have
posted this presentation to the FAN website, both as a powerpoint
file, and as a pdf
file.
Based on the blitzkrieg we have seen this past week,
I expect that the pro-fluoridation forces will continue to use this new "study"
as a hammer to pressure local officials into supporting fluoridation. It is
imperative, therefore, that we let our local and state officials know the other
side of the story -- the side that the media has thus far been unwilling to
tell.
Michael Connett
Executive Director
Fluoride Action Network
Executive Director
Fluoride Action Network
###
FAN Press Release:
Calgary Fluoride Study Fatally Flawed; Key Data Omitted
Calgary Fluoride Study Fatally Flawed; Key Data Omitted
A recently published study concludes that tooth decay
rates in Calgary, Alberta, have increased because of the city's
decision to scrap its fluoridation program. But the study omits data showing
that the spike in decay mostly occurred when fluoride was still in the water and
used methods that a leading scientist says do "not provide a valid assessment,"
reports the Fluoride Action Network (FAN).
In recent years, dozens of Canadian communities, including Calgary, have stopped fluoridating water,
citing concerns about safety, effectiveness, and cost. The number of Canadians
drinking fluoridated water has plummeted by over 30% since 2005.
Now a new study is fueling
a lobbying blitzkrieg, with calls for Calgary and other non-fluoridated Canadian cities to
resume fluoridation, based on claims that Calgary children suffered a dramatic
spike in cavities in the three years following fluoridation's end in
2011.
The study, however, is riddled with problems, and is "not a valid
assessment of the effect of fluoridation cessation," says Dr. Trevor Sheldon, Dean of Hull York Medical
School and scientist who specializes in studying the effectiveness of health
care interventions, including fluoridation.
The study
determined Calgary's pre-cessation cavity rate based solely on a survey
conducted 6 years prior to fluoridation ceasing, even though a much more
comprehensive survey was conducted just 1 year prior to fluoridation
ending.
The omitted survey, conducted in 2009/10, shows
that most of Calgary's increase in tooth decay occurred while Calgary was still
adding fluoride to its water. As Sheldon explains, the omitted data "shows a higher
average annual rate of increase in [tooth decay] in the period before cessation
(7%) than in the period which includes years after cessation
in Calgary (5%)."
Says Sheldon, "this is
contrary to what one would expect if fluoridation cessation was the primary
driver of increases in caries over the period."
The increase in cavities
seen in Calgary is not unusual, but part of a larger trend. Tooth decay in baby
teeth has been on the rise since the 1990s throughout North America, including in
fluoridated cities like Edmonton.
"To imply that ending
fluoridation is the cause of Calgary's increased decay while omitting data which
shows that most
of the decay occurred when fluoride was still in the water, raises serious
questions about the study's credibility," says attorney and FAN Executive
Director, Michael Connett. "The aggressive, orchestrated way this
study has been rolled out to pressure city councilors to resume fluoridation
raises the specter of a politically motivated study."
The lead author of the
study, Lindsay McLaren, is not an independent scientist on the fluoridation
controversy.
McLaren currently serves as
a member of the Alberta Health Services'
Community Water Fluoridation committee, has written pro-fluoridation commentaries, and, in 2013,
spearheaded a successful effort to convince the Alberta Public Health
Association to begin lobbying for fluoridation.
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