Newsletter
Senior advisor to the Fluoride Action
Network, Paul Connett, PhD, recently travelled to New Zealand to present the
case against fluoridation to the public in a series of speaking events. The NZ
campaigners captured one of these presentations in full for
your viewing pleasure, and also made a seperate 2-minute long video using
excerpts from a presentation explaining where
fluoridation chemicals come from. Paul was also featured in a powerful
8-minute interview that aired on Mainland TV that I urge you to watch
and share.
While in NZ, Paul noticed that an inaccurate and misleading 2014 review was still repeatedly being used by officials to support their fluoridation efforts. Below is Paul's explaination of how NZ officials are using junk science and fraudulent conclusions to influence both government officials and residents:
While in NZ, Paul noticed that an inaccurate and misleading 2014 review was still repeatedly being used by officials to support their fluoridation efforts. Below is Paul's explaination of how NZ officials are using junk science and fraudulent conclusions to influence both government officials and residents:
NZ Scientists Use Inaccurate Review to
Promote Fluoridation
For over 70 years the promotion of fluoridation has
been based on "authority" rather than sound science. Thus it came as no surprise
when the NZ Ministry of Health in their current attempt to introduce mandatory
fluoridation by stealth, called on some prestigious scientists and researchers
to produce a blue ribbon panel report to support the claims that the practice is
safe. Heading up this panel were none other than the Prime minister's chief
scientific adviser Sir Peter Gluckman along with Sir David Skegg, president of
the Royal Society of New Zealand. The panel faithfully obliged and their report
was released on August 22, 2014 and entitled: Health Effects of Water Fluoridation: a
Review of the Scientific Evidence.
Gluckman and Skegg signed off on the review’s content and their overall
conclusion (surprise, surprise) was that fluoridation is
"safe."
However, the report is full of mistakes, omissions,
misrepresentations and selective use of the literature. One of the biggest
mistakes came in their cavalier dismissal of the Harvard
meta-analysis of 27 IQ studies (Choi et al., 2012). Gluckman and Skegg
repeat a major mistake made by many promoters of fluoridation. They incorrectly
stated that the average lowering of IQ in 26 of the 27 studies was a downward
shift of "less than 1 IQ point." However this mistake was corrected by Choi et
al over 2 year's ago. It was not a drop of half an IQ point but a drop of half
of one standard deviation, which is the equivalent of 7 IQ points. That is a
very big difference!
The Gluckman and Skegg team "corrected" this
mistake in an updated version of their report. But they corrected their mistake
in a way that would not be clear to the layperson but worse still made this
change without changing the conclusion derived from the mistake. This
conclusion - for anyone knowledgeable on the subject - is ridiculous, but
unfortunately many will be deceived by this manipulation and conclude there is
no problem with fluoride's neurotoxicity - and specifically its ability to lower
IQ in children.
Thus I urge you to compare below the original and
corrected version of their text. I have put in bold the words changed and the
derived conclusion in italics -this conclusion is not changed between the two
versions.
ORIGINAL
VERSION: “Recently there have been a number of reports from China and other
areas …that have claimed an association between high water fluoride levels and
minimally reduced intelligence (measured as IQ) in children…the claimed shift
of less than one IQ point suggests that this is likely to be a
measurement or statistical artifact of no functional
significance”
CORRECTED VERSION: “Recently there have been a
number of reports from China and other areas …that have claimed an association
between high water fluoride levels and minimally reduced intelligence (measured
as IQ) in children…the claimed shift of less than one standard
deviation suggests that this is likely to be a measurement or statistical
artifact of no functional significance.”
If this correction had been stated more clearly, as
it should have been, it would have appeared
as:
“Recently there have been a number of reports from
China and other areas …that have claimed an association between high water
fluoride levels and minimally (should have been omitted, PC) reduced
intelligence (measured as IQ) in children…the claimed shift of 7 IQ points
suggests that this is likely to be a measurement or statistical artifact
of no functional significance.”
Communicated this way it would have been obvious
that the conclusion was sheer nonsense, since a shift downwards of 7 IQ points
-were it to occur - would more than halve the number of geniuses in the NZ
population and more than double the number of mentally handicapped. That would
have huge economic and social implications for NZ but according to Gluckman and
Skegg and their "corrected" version stands, "it would have no
functional significance"!
So we are left with a very uncomfortable question,
did Gluckman and Skegg and their advisers simply make a clumsy mistake, or was
this a deliberate attempt to deceive the
public?
In
addition to the specific deception above, their overview of neurotoxicity was
highly selective and self-serving. Other than the Harvard meta-analysis they
ignored the over 300 animal and human studies that also lend weight to
fluoride's neurotoxicity, but selected one study that failed to find a
difference in IQ between a fluoridated and non-fluoridated community - Broadbent
et al., 2014. How selective is that? Moreover, they failed to note that this
study has been critiqued for its lack of power to detect a difference (see the
Feb 2016
letter by Osmunson, Limeback and Neurath that
was published in the same journal where the Broadbent article was published).
There were virtually no controls. There were over 900 children in the
fluoridated community but less than 90 in the non-fluoridated and about half of
these were exposed to fluoride via supplements.
Despite the many mistakes and misrepresentations it
contains, this review is still being heavily used to engineer mandatory
fluoridation in NZ. Gluckman and Skegg and their co-authors have let down the
public, who have the right to expect far better from such "prestigious"
scientists and the bodies they represent.
-Paul Connett,
PhD,
Co-author of The Case Against
Fluoride (Chelsea Green, 2010) and senior adviser to the
Fluoride Action Network
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