F.A.N. Newsletter
When Paul and I were helping communities
fight off incinerator proposals in North America (between 1985 and 1995) we
found that we could only go so far saying “no.” To win the battle you have to say “yes” to something else.
Politicians do not want to be confronted with the “status quo” versus “chaos.”
Things got easier when we and others showed there were better, safer and cost-effective alternatives than either incineration or mega-landfills (see Paul’s book The Zero Waste Solution… (Chelsea Green, 2013). In the case of fighting tooth decay –especially among children from low income families- there is also a better solution than fluoridation, which is far safer, more appropriate, more cost-effective, and better for the overal health of the child. That solution has been used very effectively in Scotland for several years. It is called “Childsmile.” Below are some of the principles, practical details and the history of this program. But first an update on our annual Fundraiser.
The Childsmile program in Scotland
Things got easier when we and others showed there were better, safer and cost-effective alternatives than either incineration or mega-landfills (see Paul’s book The Zero Waste Solution… (Chelsea Green, 2013). In the case of fighting tooth decay –especially among children from low income families- there is also a better solution than fluoridation, which is far safer, more appropriate, more cost-effective, and better for the overal health of the child. That solution has been used very effectively in Scotland for several years. It is called “Childsmile.” Below are some of the principles, practical details and the history of this program. But first an update on our annual Fundraiser.
Fundraiser
update
Yesterday saw a large jump in our total.
First, we were able to reach $50,000, which triggered a pledge of $2,000 from
one of our super angels and then donations came in steadily throughout the day
eventually reaching a total $56,145 from a total of 220 donors. We are
still a long way from our mini-goal of $120,000 by Christmas Eve but as we found
last year things vary by the day.
Please give what you can afford over this weekend. The next
bulletin will be coming to you on Monday, but you can follow the progress of our
fundraiser on our home page (www.FluorideALERT.org ).
Thank you all for your donations. Every donation counts. At times FAN feels like a worldwide family.
Thank you all for your donations. Every donation counts. At times FAN feels like a worldwide family.
How to Donate:
or by check, payable to Fluoride Action Network, and mail to:
FAN
c/o Connett
104 Walnut Street
Binghamton, New York 13905
The Childsmile program in Scotland
Childsmile has become the model program
for the prevention of dental caries in young children in Scotland. Implemented
in 2001 to target children from deprived areas, it has proven to be far more
effective than the fluoridation of public drinking water in the U.S. and other
fluoridating countries. Unlike fluoridation, it does not force children to
swallow fluoride. However, Childsmile does target children at greatest risk of
caries for fluoride sealants and they do encourage the use of toothpaste with
fluoride. There is a similarly successful program called the Nexø Program in
Denmark that does not use fluoride toothpaste or sealants. We will discuss Nexø
in another bulletin.
According to a BBC news
report in 2013:
• It’s a
program to encourage nursery children to brush their teeth
• It
involves staff at all Scottish nurseries offering free supervised tooth-brushing
every day.
• It also
helps parents establish a healthy diet from the earliest
stage.
•
According to Public Health Minister Michael Matheson, “By this simple measure,
NHS costs associated with the dental disease of five-year-old children have
decreased dramatically.”
• Glasgow
researchers found that the scheme had reduced the cost of treating dental
disease in five-year-olds by more than half between 2001 and
2010.
• It
costs about £1.8m a year.
• It has
saved more than £6m in dental costs, according to a new study.
In a Scottish Government
press release in September
2017:
“The
Childsmile programme, with its emphasis on prevention, rather than treatment has
resulted in significant improvements in children’s oral health across Scotland.
Our aim is that every child has access to Childsmile.”
I think the success of
Childsmile is because from the government down, the Scottish people want health
equality and they are willing to collaborate to achieve it. Secondly, the
target of the program is prevention, not treatment.
Background
Background
In 2000, the British
Dental Health Foundation called upon the Scottish Executive to
implement fluoridation of the public drinking water “to combat tooth decay
problems afflicting thousands of children.”
Four years later, in November
2004, the BBC reported that the Scottish
Executive decided not to fluoridate its public drinking water and “was instead
planning a range of other measures to improve the dental health of
children.”
Preceding this decision the opposition to
fluoridation was “overwhelming.” According to The
Scottish Herald, “Thousands have raised objections to
any move by the Scottish Executive to introduce what has been described as mass
medication…” A 2005 news
article reported that “97% of responses from the
public” opposed fluoridation.
In January
2002, the Scottish Consumer Council warned
that pressing ahead with the proposals [to fluoridate] could expose the public
to ‘adverse health effects’;
In November
2002, the Shadow Health Minister Nicola
Sturgeon “rejected any plans to add fluoride to water
supplies.”
In September
2003, the Green Party MSP [Member of the
Scottish Parliament] Robin Harper stated “We [the Scottish Green Party] oppose
water fluoridation on health and ethical grounds. Fluoridation breaches medical
ethics and human rights by forcing people to take medication against their will,
and has been linked to bone cancer and premature puberty.”
On the Ethical Aspects of
Childsmile
There is a 2009 published full-text paper
on the web (which was also published in Bioethics) titled Tackling
socially determined dental inequalities: ethical aspects of Childsmile, the
national child oral health demonstration programme in
Scotland. It’s a
refreshing academic exploration of Childsmile, such as the “programme’s twin
aims of improving oral health and reducing health inequalities; … the rationale
for making particular elements universal or targeted; … an examination of the
political values and evidence base in relation to the programme’s development; …
the area of cost-effectiveness of Childsmile and whether prevention should be
prioritised over treatment”; … and the consideration of “how Childsmile ‘scores’
in terms of utility and justice…”
More on
Childsmile
“Childsmile is the flagship
national oral health improvement programme for Scotland. The overarching aims of
Childsmile are to improve the oral health of children in Scotland and to reduce
inequalities both in dental health and in access to dental services. There is
also potential for other health impacts particularly with regard to diet and
obesity. The Childsmile Programme is the main route to delivering the dental
HEAT target.
“The Programme has three main
arms:
1. Childsmile Core is a
Scotland-wide initiative involving universal supervised nursery school
toothbrushing provision extended to Primary 1 and 2 classes in most deprived
areas [4-6 and 5-7 years of age respectively]; in addition to the free
distribution of toothpaste and toothbrushes, oral health improvement packs are
distributed to every child in Scotland on at least six occasions during their
first five years.
2. Childsmile Practice targets
children from birth and promotes oral health improvement and clinical caries
prevention in dental practice, salaried primary care dental services and local
community settings. This element has focused on reorientating dental practice to
an anticipatory care and team approach to children’s dentistry, and integrating
dental services with wider health services and community initiatives. There has
been significant workforce development in creating Dental Health Support Worker
roles within public health nursing teams, developing referral pathways, and
training Dental Nurses ( DN) in clinical prevention including toothbrush
demonstration, dietary advice and support, and as the child gets older the
application of fluoride varnish.
3. Childsmile Nursery and School
targets the most deprived 20% of nurseries and schools by identifying the 20% of
establishments with the highest proportion of children living in the most
deprived local quintile, as defined using SIMD. These nurseries and schools
receive additional preventive initiatives in the form of twice yearly fluoride
varnish applications to children’s teeth by Childsmile teams. These teams
comprise DNs and DHSWs. The Childsmile teams also deliver oral health promotion
advice to parents and carers. In addition, the Childsmile Nursery and School
programme contributes to the creation of a health-promoting environment within
nurseries and primary schools and provides additional pathways of referral into
dental services for those who have not yet accessed dental care…” Read
more of this longer article
here.
To access the Childsmile articles on
the FAN website go to
http://fluoridealert.org/news/?country=united-kingdom&sub=childsmile
Thank you,
See all FAN bulletins online
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